Once upon an app, with bated breath…
By Tom Wachunas
“…Each piece is like a page from a book,
only neither the beginning of the story nor the ending is always clear. Some of
the stories are obvious; some are hidden a little deeper. Like a good adventure
story, we wait with bated breath as we turn the page and continue reading.” - Michael Weiss
“We are entering the Age of Integration!
...The digital artist is the vehicle to that kind of cultural change. We are
the first generation of this new breed and we will most surely be
remembered...for we bring a quake of expression and technique that makes the
art world very uncomfortable and that is as it should be. “ – Gene Hirsch
“Art is, now, mainly a form of thinking.” – Susan Sontag
“Fine art is knowledge made visible.” - Gustave Courbet
EXHIBIT: Whimsical Worlds of Wonder by Michael
Weiss / Studio M exhibition at the Massillon Museum, THROUGH APRIL 2, 2017 /
121 Lincoln Way East (Ohio Route 172) in downtown Massillon / 330-833-4061 /
Viewing hours: Tuesday through Saturday 9:30am - 5:00pm, Sunday 2:00pm - 5:00pm www.michaelweiss.carbonmade.com www.massillonmuseum.org
Full disclosure: What
you are about to read is rooted in unabashed self-plagiarism. I’ve copied and
pasted much of the content, while tweaking a few phrases here and there, from a
review I wrote back in January, 2014, of an exhibit of Michael Weiss’s work
(interestingly enough under the same title as this current show at Massillon
Museum) at Malone University’s McFadden Gallery. Here’s a link, in case you’re
interested: http://artwach.blogspot.com/2014/01/once-upon-time.html
More full
disclosure. I’m doing this because even though I have nothing substantially new
to add to what I wrote three years ago about Weiss’s pictorial content or
methodology, I still think this current exhibit is fascinating enough to merit our continuing attentions. That
said, it has prompted some additional considerations along conceptual lines,
which I’ll elaborate a bit more at the end of this post.
Meanwhile, Michael
Weiss lists all the works here as “digital illustrations,” and collectively
they exude an epic air – as in a sweeping, ongoing narrative. Call it a
representational saga spanning love and longing, loss and discovery, desire and
fulfillment. Aside from the facile digital wizardry evident in these images,
they amply demonstrate that Weiss is a mesmerizing storyteller.
His pictures are
enchanted scenarios that found their beginnings in book titles and quotes, song
lyrics, and even movie taglines. But then, somewhere in the artist’s fertile
imagination, such snippets of inspiration (sometimes identifiable enough by
their titles) seem to have taken flight into unexpected dimensions. They range
from delightfully narcotic, eerily tranquil dreamscapes (that occasionally
bring to mind the paintings of surrealists Salvador Dali or Rene Magritte) to
more lyrical meditations on the mystical. Yet even at their most haunting or
strange, these visions still reside in the comfortable neighborhood of the
familiar and accessible.
Weiss has mastered
a digital technique that gives his surfaces a stressed, aged look that can
convey a sense of timelessness. The characters that populate his locales –
rendered as if seen through scratched glass - might well represent actual
individuals and situations from his
life. But they could just as well have something in common with our circumstances, caught as we might be
in the misty thrall our own dreams and journeys. That’s the universal allure of
stories. All of us have them, and
telling them is but one of the traditional functions of “representational art”
that continues to this day in our culture.
Is this, then, what
we mean by illustration? If so, must the visual art about our stories
be necessarily limited to mimetic transcriptions (albeit with some quirky
stylistic embellishments) of tangible reality? Seeing Weiss’s pieces gathered here
was a déjà vu experience, to be sure. It made me wonder. Two or three years
from now, will his work have the same overall look? Or will he have outgrown
his dependable (though certainly intriguing) image-making formula into something
even more compelling while still true to the stories he wants to tell? I wait
with bated breath.
PHOTOS, from top: 1. Roots
/ 2. The Keeper/ 3. The Island was Never in the Same
Place Again / 4. Out for a Walk
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