Zine Language
By Tom Wachunas
“I knew when I met you an adventure was
going to happen.”
― A.A. Milne
EXHIBIT: Nannyville –
Drawings, Prints and Zines by Elizabeth Dallas / Kent State University at
Stark MAIN HALL ART GALLERY / 6000 Frank Avenue NW, North Canton, Ohio / THROUGH
FEBRUARY 28 / Viewing hours: Monday – Friday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
My apologies for
being so late in telling you about this exhibit, as the last day for viewing is
Feb. 28. I confess that the primary reason for my tardiness is that it has
taken a longer-than-usual while for me to get a read on my own thoughts. This
is a bit ironic, since much of the work on view here is itself confessional in
nature, and otherwise about…reading.
Elizabeth Dallas
has turned the gallery into an open book, as it were. This busy collection of her
drawings, collages, and one huge (49” x 33”) woodcut print doesn’t have the
pristine, formal look of conventional gallery exhibits. Nothing is framed or
matted or under glass. The pieces, all executed on paper, are simply pinned
very loosely to the wall in a way that suggests how some artists might casually
put up sketch book pages on their studio walls.
An accumulated inventory of visual ideas.
There is an ordered
sequence here, though, beginning with a grouping of black and white drawings
done in what appears to be ink pen and felt-tipped markers. These describe
Dallas’s journey (an adventure, to be sure) as a nanny. Boldly contoured images
– sometimes akin to styles you might find in comics or coloring books -
incorporate brief texts that describe a wide range of moments, sentiments, and
reflections. Some read like altruistic or streetwise slogans, others are more
edgy, occasionally cynical declarations. Still others are tender, even poetic
acknowledgements of Dallas’s interactions with the child in her care. These are
the original illustrations that Dallas photocopied to make her zine (short for
magazine, or fanzine) titled “Learning to Love in…Nannyville.”
The aforementioned
large woodcut is placed halfway along the gallery’s longest wall. In one way,
it’s a conclusion, or perhaps a lesson summing up the zine images, its text
declaring, “You Being You Makes Me Excited About Being Me.” You might also
think of it as a thematic bridge to the content of the colored drawings and
collages that comprise the other half of the exhibit. These in turn have an
episodic feel and a probing spirit, like snapshots of remembered or overheard
conversations, philosophical observations, or descriptions of social exchanges
and attitudes.
Beyond the facile
directness and simplicity of Dallas’s drawing style, what I find most striking
about the exhibit is how its impromptu spirit and unadorned presentation
enhances the artworks’ physicality. The loosely mounted drawings cast shadows
on the wall. They are, after all, tangible small objects bearing marks of the
artist’s hand. Flipping through Dallas’s zine (displayed in a rack mounted on
the wall along with some other zines), is a tactile, intimate exercise. Though
just a pamphlet relatively speaking, it’s still not too unlike the unique
intimacy one can experience in savoring a paperback, i.e. a book, a collection
of papers covered with configurations – drawings of a kind - made of
words.
So Dallas has given
us an illustrated journal, or diary if you will – a narrative of day-to-day
memories and musings. Her story- its particulars of specific people, places,
and things aside - is in the end still a very human one, and as such could converge or
resonate with yours or mine to one degree or another. All of us have
experienced adventures, nurtured relationships, laughed in moments of joy,
cried in seasons of sadness, felt triumph and failure. All of us have stories
of wrestling with our demons or walking with our better angels.
I think of this
show as an invitation to have an adventure, to nurture the act of looking, to
connect with another person’s story. Dallas being herself can make us excited
about being us.
No comments:
Post a Comment