Refined Crudities
By Tom Wachunas
“There is no art
without intoxication. But I mean a mad intoxication! Let reason teeter!
Delirium! The highest degree of delirium! Plunged in burning dementia! Art is
the most enrapturing orgy within man's reach. Art must make you laugh a little
and make you a little afraid. Anything as long as it doesn't bore.” -Jean Dubuffet
EXHIBIT: Curiosities: Work by Tom Megalis, THROUGH
OCTOBER 26 at Translations Art Gallery, 331 Cleveland Avenue NW, downtown Canton www.translationsart.com/curiosities
http://www.megalisart.com/
This collection of
two and three-dimensional works (something of a mini-retrospective, actually)
is a raucous hybridization of modernist visual languages. The earliest language
goes back 100 years to Cubism, with its radical deconstruction of the painted
picture plane and its integration of found objects. From there, it would be difficult to believe
that Tom Megalis hasn’t consciously distilled a syntax that blends such
dialects as Jean Dubuffet’s art brut,
Saul Steinberg’s off-kilter cartoons, Jean-Michel Basquiat’s oracular
primitivism, or Tim Burton’s more macabre figurations, to name just some.
That said, Megalis
certainly brings his own imaginative recipe for animated storytelling - both
prosaic and poetic - to this multiplicity of influences. Combined with his
dizzying arsenal of fabrication techniques and media (read his statement at the
gallery or on the Translations web page), he has concocted a highly textured
gumbo, as it were, or chunky-style hunter’s stew of motley characters and
narratives.
Some of his
depictions - his jarring Trouble at the
Doorstep from 1998, or the dowdy Smoking
and Drinking Woman (2011), for example - are earthy, essentially low-relief
sculptures, scruffily painted and constructed with utilitarian detritus such as
slices of wood, scrap metal, and corrugated board. His three-dimensional pieces,
such as the sinewy musician in Flute Shed,
and the whimsical Brush Head Man, are
gritty, highly tactile assemblages full of humor and mischief.
The more recent
(2013) acrylic and spray painting, The
Birth, is a commandingly sprawling abstraction. Far from a romanticized
translation of wondrous or tender nativity, this is a visceral, writhing array
of amorphous anatomical shapes interspersed with thick paint splats and drips –
an altogether electrified grimace.
In general, the physical
rawness of this art exudes a picaresque sensibility, not too
unlike the untamed, indelicate spirit we once commonly associated with
“outsider art.” So yes, to borrow from the Dubuffet quote above, this is indeed
delirious art that can make you laugh,… or be a little afraid. The collection
here presents a tenuous balance of innocent playfulness with palpable angst.
Still, it’s art that intoxicates with an uncanny mystique.
PHOTOS, from top: The Birth; Trouble at the Doorstep; Brush
Head Man; Eden; Stand Up
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