Outside the Lines
By Tom Wachunas
“Drawing makes you see things clearer, and clearer, and clearer still.
The image is passing through you in a physiological way, into your brain, into
your memory - where it stays - it's transmitted by your hands.”
― Martin Gayford, A
Bigger Message: Conversations with David Hockney ―
“We who draw do so
not only to make something visible to others, but also to accompany something
invisible to its incalculable destination.” ― John Berger, Bento's
Sketchbook
EXHIBIT: Drawing
Invitational – works by Noelle Allen, Jean Alexander Frater, Joseph
Karlovec, Anderson Turner, Josh Welker, and Patricia Zinsmeister Parker / At
Main Hall Art Gallery on the Kent State University at Stark campus / 6000 Frank
Avenue NW, North Canton, Ohio / THROUGH SEPTEMBER 30 / For more information,
contact Jack McWhorter at 330.244.3356 or jmcwhort@kent.edu
Many viewers of
this exhibit might be challenged to wonder how some of the pieces - in a show clearly
listed as drawing – are even “drawings” at all. The term itself can bring to
mind all sorts of traditional (which is to say culturally conditioned)
preconceptions, assumptions, and expectations concerning “draftsmanship,” media,
or the nature of representational art.
But the works
presented here constitute an expansion of the parameters of the term – a
gestalt, if you will - such that we could rightly consider “drawing” as an
ideation greater than the sum of its obvious parts. Think of drawing as
essentially configuration. That is,
the manipulation, organization, or structuring of many possible elements which need not be identified with, or
limited to, a specific medium, material, technique, or for that matter, even
two-dimensionality. From this perspective, drawing can be rightly appreciated
as a conceptual and practical
foundation for making any work of
visual art, so that one could consider, say, a full-color abstract painting on
canvas, a free-standing sculpture, a ceramic vessel, or a work of architecture,
as “a drawing.”
With crayon,
graphite, or watercolor on unusual surfaces such as resin or Mlyar sheets,
Chicago-based Noelle Allen renders membranous “pictures” that suggest organic
cross sections, microcosms, or the workings of morphological structures. These
fascinating, ghostly images are teeming with myriad tiny marks and shapes that
sometimes appear to be suspended in pools of viscous liquid.
The pieces by Jean
Alexander Frater, also based in Chicago, are deconstructions and reformulations
of stretched or framed raw canvas. The uniform 2D surface that we normally
associate with supporting paint becomes a sculpted entity in various states of
disruption. Call it a 3D meditation on the intrinsic components (malleable
textures and patterns) of materiality itself.
Joseph Karlovec is
currently an Exhibit Technician at the Akron Museum of Art. His “A Simpler
Time” looks a bit like a storyboard sketch for a scene from Jurassic Park. The
work combines two mark-making methods which might be metaphors for two epochs
of life on our planet. There’s an interesting tension between the carefully
contoured style of the delicate floral arrangement at the top of the scene –
like you’d find in a coloring book - and the more visceral, double-lined
(accomplished by holding two pencils at once) rendering of the crocodile (?) in
the low foreground. Meanwhile, the photo-transfer of greenery around a
pavilion-like structure nestled in the middle ground could be a commentary on
the encroachments of “civilized” living - human kind’s managed and manicured
landscapes vs. the primordial wild.
There’s a coloring
book simplicity, too, in the sketchbook illustrations by versatile artist,
curator, and writer (including art reviews for the Akron Beacon Journal),
Anderson Turner. While some are framed and under glass as “finished” pieces,
most are tacked to the wall with a notes-to-myself sort of randomness. See them
all as steps in a process - selected ideas related to a larger, ongoing “fantasy”
narrative about an underwater culture populated by “Mermen.” Anderson’s images – sure-handed, quick and somewhat
whimsical - often have a dimensionality that suggests they could be designs for
future sculptures.
“Fortress” is a very large black and
white work on okawara (a Japanese printmaking-grade paper) made with graphite
and ink, by Josh Welker, currently based in Upland, Indiana. The piece is
indeed a formidable and altogether mesmerizing series of maze-like layers
comprised of ornate, repeated shapes, patterns, and visual textures. For all of
its sheer linear density, the work is nonetheless strangely airy, with an
intriguing sense of spatial depth. There are many intricate passages in this
vast matrix that harken to the complex geometry of “carpet” pages in
illuminated manuscripts, or the 3D filigree and intarsia techniques from the
Middle Ages.
And “matrix” might
be a good way to get a handle on “You Could Hear a Pin Drop,” a gloss enamel
and collage work on paper by Patricia Zinsmeister Parker. For many years,
Parker has been one our region’s most eminently accomplished painters, having
honed a unique, expressionistic language often characterized by aggressive
color dynamics and mark-making that can be at once startling, bold, and enigmatic.
Here, her drawing
is a painterly field (you could call it a system, matrix, or implied grid)
comprised of discrete units, each supporting some variant of unabashedly shiny,
broad, and very blue gestures and marks. It’s a progression that seems dictated
not so much by a pre-planned logic per se, but rather Parker’s immersion in the
moment of making and seeing one mark, then intuitively responding to it with
the next.
This
eye-popping progression, this continuous declaration of primal marks, looks
like it could go on forever. And interestingly,
it also feels like an affirmation of the history of drawing itself, even back
to those prehistoric communal gatherings of individuals who put pigment on cave
walls. As if to say, I am here, I have
seen, I am seeing.
PHOTOS, from top: Ghosted, by Noelle Allen; Canvas Fall From Rectangle, by Jean
Alexander Frater ; A Simpler Time, by
Joseph Karlovec ; Assorted Sketchbook Works, by Anderson Turner ; Fortress, by Joseph Welker ; You Could Hear a Pin Drop, by Patricia
Zinsmeister Parker
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