Oh Gaud
By Tom Wachunas
From Webster’s New
Universal Unabridged Dictionary:
Gaud, n.
1. a worthless or trifling ornament; a
trinket; a bauble
2. [pl.]
showy gaieties
3. a jest; trick; sport; fraud [Obs.]
“I’m afraid that if you look
at a thing long enough, it loses all of its meaning.” -Andy Warhol
EXHIBIT: Oxytocin – works by Maxim Rossett at
BLISS Gallery, 334 4th Street NW, downtown Canton, THROUGH
SEPTEMBER, Tuesdays-Fridays Noon-4 p.m.
First, a caveat
about reasonable art gallery protocol.
At the time I closely viewed this exhibit, it was several days after the artist
reception and public opening (which I could not attend). Some works had already
sold and were out of the building. It’s possible that if you stop by to see the
show in the coming weeks, you might not see the same show I saw. I think that professional etiquette in the context
of the Arts District requires fairness to the interested viewing public – and
the artist – by leaving all the work intact and viewable until a clearly stated
end date. After all, we’re talking about art exhibits here, and not just
glorified garage sales. ‘Nuff said.
File this review
under confessions of a conflicted voyeur. There’s a certain irony in naming
this art exhibit “Oxytocin,” after a hormonal neurotransmitter that reportedly
dispels anxiety or fear while engendering feelings of affectionate bonding.
While I’m loathe to “love” these mixed media works on paper and canvas by Maxim
Rossett, there are marginal aspects I “like,” if only in the Facebook
application of the word. Liking something in that electronic universe is an
ambiguous signifier, and not necessarily a clear indication of a wholeheartedly
warm embrace of a specific idea or content. I respectfully ask that as you read
on, hold that thought.
The July 29 posting
at www.curatorialcollective.com
tells us that “noted influences” in Rossett’s art include such modernist
luminaries as Henri Matisse, Jean Dubuffet, Philip Guston, and Cy Twombly. Yet
based on the pictorial evidence we see in this exhibit, the influence of those
particular painters often seems more incidental and peripheral than consistently
substantive.
I think a more
revelatory exploration of historical precedents for Rossett’s punk-funk,
“low-brow” approach can take us as at least as far back as the “anti-art”
shenanigans of the Dada movement, which emerged just after World War I in
Europe. The prevailing spirit among the Dadaists was one of vociferous disgust
with what they perceived to be the utter corruption of Western culture. Their
dismantling of traditional academic definitions and practices of art-making
essentially climaxed a process that had begun during the last few decades of
the 19th century. The seeds of their discontent would nevertheless
grow into the daunting diversity of other ideas and methods that would shape
all of 20th century Modern Art.
Additionally, the
frenetic drawing energy apparent in many of Rossett’s configurations, combined
with the loose, spontaneous painting style (though too often appearing
diffident and arbitrary) is in many ways a throwback to the “Neo-Expressionism”
of the 1980s. In particular, the graphic impact of his figurative renderings at
times brings to mind the urban graffiti character and brutally raw stylizations
of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s (1960-88) paintings.
Rossett’s works aren’t really “compositions”
in any ostensibly elegant or traditional (academic) sense, though his black and
white drawings do employ a relatively more sleek cohesiveness. They are,
rather, sprawling juxtapositions, or panoramic collisions of disparate (and
desperate) cartoons, appropriated imagery, cryptic symbols and frenzied,
obsessive patterns often interspersed with textual content. Whether single
words and phrases, or snippets of dialogue between the zany residents of these
montages, they seem to constitute a collective sociopolitical commentary
(sometimes with religious undertones) or philosophical treatise on…you name it.
In one of the black
and white drawings (unfortunately, there are no titles posted with the pieces),
a thought balloon, hovering over the profile of a grimacing man holding a
smiley-face mask on a stick in front of him, reads “Emotions grow hysterical
beneath the passivity.” Just to the right of that passage, scrawled in jittery
letters above the headless body of a nude woman, are the words “GAWD IS NOT
DEAD.” And neither is gaud.
Rossett’s pictures
are meandering streams of consciousness (his, ours, or both?) that might
describe a disjunctive flea market of the mind. Their compositional anarchy,
and their sheer density of visual data is perhaps a symbol of, or messy paean
to the dizzying manifestations and functions of contemporary social media.
Therein, searching for the sublime and meaningful amid the ugly, the absurd,
and the just plain silly, can be an exasperating exercise.
For that reason
alone, I’ve often been tempted to unfriend the entire institution of Facebook,
for example. Yet like many of us, I am easily hooked. Similarly, despite my
ambivalence toward the brand of art practiced by Mr. Rossett, I can’t seem to
stop looking at his derivative doodlings.
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