Jonah Jacobs’ Tactile Microcosms
By Tom Wachunas
EXHIBIT: Post Human Biomes, work by Jonah Jacobs,
THROUGH MAY 13 at Journey Art
Gallery, 431 4th Street NW, downtown Canton / Gallery hours are Tuesday –
Saturday Noon to 6 PM / or by appointment
330.546.7061 www.journeyartgallery.com
biome:
a major ecological community type, e.g.
a tropical rain forest, grassland, or desert (Merriam-Webster)
At first blush,
the title of the Jonah Jacobs exhibit at Journey Art Gallery bodes vaguely
apocalyptic. While “Post Human Biomes” might initially smack of scarred
environs or ecosystems surviving some sort of Malthusian catastrophe, this is
decidedly not the message conveyed by Mr. Jacobs’ intriguing visual
explorations.
These are tactile
clusters of upcycled materials that are, in a way, three-dimensional documents of
the artist’s intensely meticulous manual labors. In a larger sense, those
repetitive labors have yielded mesmerizing forms that hover invitingly
somewhere between familiar surfaces and mysterious, inflated 3D molecular maps. You
might call these structures, at once simple and complex, discrete metaphorical
ecologies wherein the changeable climate is color itself – vibrant, even
joyous.
The substances
that comprise these mixed media sculptural works are common if not somewhat
unconventional. A good example is the large wall piece, a half-dome
configuration called Peridium I (referring
to the outer, spore-bearing coat of fungi such as mushrooms): egg cartons,
oatmeal, salt, sand, plaster and model railroad gravel. Materials in other
works include cotton swabs and finely shredded fabrics and papers. Don’t be
denied a surprise by looking too quickly at the modestly-scaled The Living Word. The uniformly miniscule
pieces of green-dyed paper (hint: it’s newsprint) make it appear to be a simple
swatch of artificial turf. But as is the case with all the pieces here, really close scrutiny is its own reward.
Another admirable
enticement here is the inclusion of many smaller-scaled (roughly hand-sized), affordably
priced modules. Each is an elegant unit in itself, yet made so that buyers
could design and assemble multi-part, in-home pieces of their own.
There is a sensual,
spectacular density in Jacobs’ motifs of repeated small forms congealing to
make larger systems or symbiotic “communities.” Often seething with opulent,
bristling textures, they can alternately suggest animal, foliate, or mineral
microcosms, not unlike coral reefs, lush gardens, or exotic geodes. These
constructions are wholly beguiling transformations of ordinary ingredients into
extraordinary evocations of nature’s intricate and fecund architectures.
PHOTOS, from top (first
three courtesy Judi Krew/ SnarkyArt Studio, bottom photo from Jonah Jacobs
Facebook page): Installation view, Acretion
(36” diameter) in foreground; Blue
and Violet Polyp I; The Lines Begin to Blur; Peridium I (28” diameter)
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