A Bargain-Basement Hyperhodgepodge
By Tom Wachunas
”I have nothing to say/ and I am saying it/
and that is poetry/ as I need it.” -
John Cage, from "Lecture on Nothing" (1949)
EXHIBIT: THEATRE OF THE MIND – work by John Bruce
Alexander and Robert Gallik / at Little Art Gallery, located in North
Canton Public Library / THROUGH OCT. 2, 2016 / 185 N. Main St., North Canton,
OH /330.499.4712 Ex. 312
A goofy
gallimauphry? A silly salmagundi? A pithy pastiche? This gathering of works by
John Bruce Alexander and Robert Gallik is a curious mélange of objects and
images offered at surprisingly affordable prices (ranging from $10 to $175).
Many of the pieces do seem to have a casual, almost throw-away sensibility,
making the gallery feel a bit like a flea market, or the artists’ inventory
clearance sale.
In his
bio/statement, Gallik tells us, “The subject matter for my work has been form:
shapes, color, balance, tension or texture structured in space…” Clear enough,
keeping in mind that those elements are embraced by all sculptors to one degree or another regardless of “subject
matter.” But then Gallik adds this: “…What they mean or symbolize, I don’t
know. Maybe they’re only props on this stage we call life.”
So discerning the
artist’s deeper motivations and conceptual intentions is left to us, the
viewers. We are in effect invited to write the script, as it were, wherein
Gallik’s “props” are more like animated characters that cavort about in a
narrative of whimsical or surreal riddles. “Sometimes it surprises me,” Gallick
writes, “what bubbles up from the subconscious…”
There’s certainly a
raw, child-like spontaneity - and even an art
brut spirit - to the way Gallik has constructed his array of common or
found materials, giving them the aura of cartoonish folk art. Yet they’re also
sophisticated in an odd sort of way, often bringing to mind, in 3D form, the
delightfully quirky stylizations of Saul Steinberg (1914-1999), who once described
himself as “a writer who draws.” In 1978, the eminent critic, Harold Rosenberg,
wrote this of Steinberg’s art in an essay for the Whitney Museum of American
Art, though I think the observation is apropos enough to Gallik’s aesthetic
elements as well: “…a parade of fictitious personages, geometric shapes, items
of household equipment, personified furniture, each staged in a fiction of what
is – or in a dream of being something else.”
In his lengthy
bio/statement, John Bruce Alexander goes a step further (or would “backward” be
more accurate?) than Gallik’s when addressing the nature of his art. “I am not
sure what art is or is supposed to be,” he writes, adding, “I may be doing it
by accident or maybe not. Your view of what I have done is exactly what it is.
All that I make are a form of self-portrait.”
Yikes. Are we to read this disarming if not ironic admission as sincere
self-deprecation, or that Alexander doesn’t know what he’s doing? Or is it to
imply that what he has made might be something other than “art”? Maybe I’m
making more of his words than they merit. In any case, I’ll stick with that
cute old bit of abductive (abducktive?)
reasoning and note that if it quacks like a duck, swims like a duck… You get
the picture.
Alexander’s pictures,
then, essentially take three forms here. Arguably the least successful are his
reverse- color images on clear acrylic sheets (i.e., images made by applying
material – mostly paint, I think - to the back of the clear sheet). It’s a technique
that diminishes the tactile sense of the artist’s hand so that the pieces all
have the same glossy poster look. That in itself isn’t as problematic as
Alexander’s inconsistent design sensibilities. They aren’t dynamic compositions
as such, but rather simplistic juxtapositions of non-descript shapes and marks,
as well as representational images, floated on ambiguous planes of color. With
the exception of the few that are mounted away from the wall to allow for some
interesting shadow play, such as “Banshee,” there’s something a little lifeless
about this formulaic methodology.
Another series of
small black–and-white works on canvas are considerably more engaging. Most of
these have a vaguely photo-documentary feel, depicting a kind of street theatre
with a sociopolitical agenda, and include figures against brick walls with block-letter
graffiti messages such as “Mother Should I Trust The Government?”
Alexander’s most
visually exciting pieces – even to the point of dizzying - are his color collage panels. These are
stunning if only from the perspective of considering the insanely laborious
exactitude needed to cut out and paste myriad tiny images and texts. At first
blush these pieces might seem like random senselessness. But a decidedly smart
move was the inclusion of the magnifying glasses mounted in various spots on
the gallery walls to assure ease of closer scrutiny. Thus engaged, you can
better identify the thematic/conceptual threads that hold them together.
So take your time
exploring these shiny surfaces, like so many vibrant lakes, teeming with…life. Enjoy the swim.
Quack quack.
PHOTOS, from top:
Installation view, with Robert Gallik’s Button-eye
Jack with Bird Nest in Beard in left foreground / Fowl
Play on the Banks of the Tuscarawas River, by Robert Gallik / The Happy Prince or A Child’s Worst
Nightmare, by Robert Gallik / Banshee,
by John Bruce Alexander / Mother
Government, by John Bruce Alexander / Left
and Right Brain Sections, by John Bruce Alexander
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