A Spellbinding Study Hall
By Tom Wachunas
“Give me the child
until he is seven and I will give you the man.”
-St. Francis
Xavier, Jesuit missionary and educator-
EXHIBIT: Ludlow Prep, 1929: A Schoolroom Installation
by Craig Joseph and Clare Murray Adams, at Translations Art Gallery THROUGH
SEPTEMBER 28 / 331 Cleveland Avenue NW, downtown Canton. Gallery hours are Noon
to 9 p.m. Wednesday, Noon to 5 p.m. Thursday through Saturday.
In his statement
for this show (www.translationsart.com/ludlowprep),
Translations curator Craig Joseph writes about his creative process in a way
that brings to mind how a garden happens. Arid ground, tilled, seeded then
nurtured with water and light, can give rise to lush flora – from lifelessness to
fecundity.
Antique
photographs, especially portraits, can seem like dry dirt, yielding only dusty
remnants of lives once lived. Yet with photographs like the one that inspired
this installation - a 1920s school group portrait found in an attic – we
nevertheless intuitively trust that what we’re seeing actually existed in some specific place and time. On their
own, though, such photographs are often mute, two-dimensional documents.
Without stories, they remain cryptic compressions of past realities.
Enter Craig Joseph’s imagination. With that,
he has tilled and sowed the tightly packed soil of the photograph as it were,
and cultivated it with the life-giving light of his remarkable poetry.
The once anonymous students in the group
portrait have acquired names and assigned seats, on which their faces are
reprinted from the original photo, in a re-created vintage classroom furnished with
21 flip-top desks (along with the teacher’s desk). Each desk incorporates a written
remembrance of the student, telling us who they became. Joseph has endowed this
imagined community with plausible identities and unique biographies. Welcome to
the deskography tableaux of a school called Ludlow Prep.
Joseph’s poems are
at once concrete and intensely lyrical marvels of description. Many of them
possess an aura of what might best be called intimate authority. I got the
sense that the people and life circumstances presented here aren’t simply
fictions, but rather adopted personae… that the author truly knows them. In a
word, uncanny, but not in any unsettling way.
Enhancing that
aura, Joseph’s choice to collaborate with assemblage artist Clare Murray Adams
was surely spot-on. Adams has always demonstrated an astute sensitivity to how
embedded memories can be revealed through visual and tactile association. Put
another way, her configurations of particular objects and textures effectively
evoke and/or illustrate intriguing stories.
This is an
impressive, fruitful collaboration wherein Adams has meticulously assembled the
mélange of period memorabilia and found objects that comprise the desk contents.
Ephemera of a bygone era, here made fully present. Harmonious with the spirit
of Joseph’s writings, her arrangements of physical materials further enliven
the installation with an emotive blend of reverential solemnity and
lightheartedness.
For visitors to
the exhibit, only one test is administered in this schoolroom. It’s the test of
real time and willingness to be wholly immersed in a wondrously designed
sensory experience. Baptism by study, if you will.
Sit, see, read, touch, even smell these lives
of Ludlow raised up from the fertile ground of the artist’s imaginations.
PHOTOS courtesy
Translations Art Gallery.
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