Her nexus revisited…and then some
By Tom Wachunas
“Originality is nothing but judicious imitation…” – Voltaire
EXHIBIT: Mixed Media Paintings By TINA MYERS .
THROUGH OCTOBER 19, 2018 at The Malone Art Gallery (MAG) - inside the east
entrance of the Johnson Center, located on Malone's campus at 2600 Cleveland
Ave, N.W., in Canton, Ohio / Gallery
hours are Monday – Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., or by appointment. /
Sunset Gathering |
November Sunset |
Heads Together |
Hectic |
42nd Street |
NV (top) / Greeter |
MEET THE ARTIST RECEPTION:
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 6-7:30 P.M.
ARTIST
STATEMENT
“Making time for art
and creative expression has always been an essential part of my well-being. I
find that many colors, shapes, and textures are soothing or fascinating to me,
and I am thrilled when those elements work together to form something pleasing
to the eye. I enjoy the freedom and sense of adventure that abstract art
offers, and I generally like to create without a lot of conscious intention.
Each piece will usually morph several times, as I test my own ability to create
form and space. I love to see how spectators experience and interpret my
finished work, and am especially impressed when a piece prompts someone’s
imagination or speaks to them in a way I never would have considered or planned.”
Déjà vu all over again? Yes and no. I’ve
commented in a positive way on the work of prolific painter Tina Meyers more
than a few times here over the past several years, and her current exhibit at
MAG does nothing to diminish my favorable disposition towards her work. That
said, this show does in fact bring up a few thoughts and questions about the
overall direction of her aesthetic. In presenting them, though, I think it
could first be useful – necessary, actually - for to you to read (or re-read as
the case may be) my review of her 2016 solo exhibit at The Little Art Gallery.
This way, I’m hoping you’ll appreciate what I consider to be foundational in
assessing Meyer’s work. Your mission, should you decide to accept it (surely not
an impossible one) is to click on this the link to the 2016 review:
What I wrote in
2016 remains appropriate and relevant to what is now on view at Malone. This
isn’t in itself a bad thing, though it might suggest that in the last two
years, Meyers has remained steadfast in her pictorial comfort zones. Again,
this certainly isn’t a bad thing. Still, I don’t think I’m alone in wondering
about painters who appear to have settled into a routine formula for
replicating predictable variations on the same themes. After all, if it ain’t
busted, why fix it, right? This is the sense I initially had here when viewing her portraits and cityscapes – more
of those quirky riffs on Cubist and Expressionist modalities. Robust as they
are, it seemed to me that she’s continuing to simply operate comfortably in her
long-established signature style.
Maybe it’s my
personal journey as an artist that’s really at the core of these considerations,
having recently navigated a daunting crossroads in my own work, prompted by a
nagging desire to venture beyond the material niche I had created for myself.
Making art had become a repetitious mechanical task, a set of all-too-familiar
procedures. Each new piece was becoming essentially an imitation of the
previous one - a rote packaging of the
same ideas, over and over again. I had boxed myself in and it was time to find
a way out. But I digress. Back to Tina Meyers.
It was only after a
more intentional, concentrated look at her 32 pieces in this exhibit that I
noticed an evolution of sorts, beginning with one of the largest acrylic
paintings, “Sunset Gathering.” It’s a
delightfully festive, even frantic work with a strongly tactile incorporation
of various collage materials. Similarly, it’s the collaged textures in “42nd
Street” that provide a jocular if not surreal spirit to a cityscape traversed
by pedestrians who look like they’re visitors from a classic Saul Steinberg
cartoon.
Additionally, there
are nine paintings executed on small corrugated cardboard cartons, among those
“NV” and “Greeter,” both incorporating paper and cardboard collage elements.
The charged surfaces of these works, protruding from the wall somewhat like
relief sculptures, bring a refreshingly playful dynamic to Meyers’ oeuvre.
While there’s no
telling yet how far she might pursue the possibilities of such expanded
dimensionality, here’s to her aesthetic thinking outside the box.
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