"Fourier" by David Kuntzman |
"The Nightgown" by William M. Bogdan |
"L3-L4" by Stephen Tornero |
"Burdened and Becoming #2" by Spencer S. Molnar |
"Diary Portrait #58" by Anna Rather |
"Chasing Shadows" by Laura Donnelly |
Valuing the invaluable: And the winner is…
By Tom Wachunas
“The studio is a laboratory, not a factory.
An exhibition is the result of your experiments, but the process is
never-ending. So an exhibition is not a conclusion.” - Chris Ofili
EXHIBIT: Stark County Artists Exhibition / THROUGH
JANUARY 13, 2019 / at the Massillon Museum,
121 Lincoln Way East in downtown Massillon / Tuesday through Saturday
9:30am - 5:00pm, Sunday 2:00pm - 5:00pm / Phone: 330-833-4061 /
It’s baaack…The
Massillon Museum’s annual juried Stark
County Artists Exhibition. By now, many of you readers have already seen
it. If not, there’s still a little more time to do so, and it would be time very
well spent. This diverse collection – 55 works by 43 artists chosen from 206
submissions from 84 artists - is even more exciting than last year’s in just
about every way. And once again, I’m elated and grateful to be included.
One predictable
aspect of the show keeps it safely ensconced in the sacrosanct tradition of
awarding prizes. It’s a typical practice that chooses one piece to be Best in
Show, then a Second Place, then a Third Place, and several Honorable Mentions. In
the past I’ve described the practice as stale and even at times feckless. In
short, a largely irrelevant ritual. I still hold that view. More on this a bit
later.
Meanwhile, the
photos I include here, in no particular order, are of just a few of many works
I consider especially compelling or particularly fascinating in this exhibit.
Two of the pieces pictured here are on the exhibition list of award winners;
four are not. I’m choosing not to tell you which are which because the jurors’
awards in this show had only a small impact on my own assessments.
David Kuntzman’s acrylic
painting, Fourier, is downright
spectacular in its sheer precision of execution. With intersecting angular planes of
eye-popping color, Kuntzman has constructed a playful geometric marvel of
spatial ambiguity.
There’s a stark, haunting simplicity to
William Bogdan’s manually colored woodcut, The
Nightgown. While the claustrophobic verticality of the work feels funereal,
suggesting a person squeezed into a coffin, the featureless, tightly framed
figure of the woman inside seems not so much gone, but uncannily present and
rising.
The linen weaving
by Stephen Tornero, L3-L4, is an
exquisitely crafted, fibrous organism or perhaps a landscape of sorts. It’s a
dynamic tour de force of myriad
threads that seem to breathe through undulating colors and patterns.
Spencer S. Molnar’s abstract Burdened and Becoming #2 (acrylic, spray
paint, and charcoal on canvas) is a startling, electrifying portrait – bursting with vicious angst and raucous glee
all at once. Electrifying, too, is the textured Diary Portrait #58 (mixed media), by Anna Rather. Here is a
mesmerizing, shaman-like figure floating in the dark, with eight hands conjuring or emanating (or absorbing?) all
sorts of bright energy currents and waves of particulate matter and runic marks.
And speaking of
effective textures, with her modular Chasing
Shadows, Laura Donnelly gives us a tender remembrance of a mother walking
with her child on a sunny day. Donnelly adorned her ceramic grid of handmade
stoneware tiles with a wispy rendering of the walking figures and their
elongated shadows, and also incised the clay with subtle decorative patterns.
Additionally, the tiles aren’t all mounted as if on a flat floor or wall. A few
of them float above the picture plane, casting their own shadows, and enhancing
the sense of motion in space.
I don’t think it at
all unreasonable to expect that another group of jurors might designate any one
of these, or for that matter a considerable number of other works in this
exhibit, as the Best in Show, or second, third, etc. My annual complaints about
hierarchies of awards are not at all meant to impugn the intelligence,
integrity, or sincerity of the jurors.
But the problem
remains. Keep in mind that in juried shows, the works we see represent a
daunting enough process of judging, of choosing. Any work we see has in effect
already received a significant award, or honor, by virtue of being just that – one
of the Chosen. I call the process ‘daunting’ because like it or not, for better
or worse, in the realm of the arts there is no such thing as a universally
applicable algorithm for objectively discerning absolute formal or conceptual
excellence. There’s no inviolable constitution of art laws. Now more than ever
before, isn’t it interesting how eagerly we might honor a work for how
imaginatively it breaks what few academic rules of aesthetic order remain in
place these days? That’s the
delightfully unreasonable nature of this beautiful beast we call art – its
often vexing capacity for usurping the status quo, for defying expectation, for
posing tough questions rather than easy answers. Despite (or sometimes even
because of ?) a juror’s education, experience, or expertise, it usually comes
down in the end to subjective matters of personal tastes, biases,
predispositions - at best a consensus of well-meaning opinions.
Given these
variables, our current paradigm for juried art exhibitions tends to be an
exercise in distinctions without a difference. Instead of calling the folks who
select the art ‘jurors,’ could we simply call them co-curators? And in place of a descending order of
monetary prizes, how about no prizes at all? If we still insist on giving some
sort of special recognition beyond the very real honor of being one of the
Chosen, maybe each curator could simply choose a favorite piece or two and issue
a spiffy certificate declaring as much and leave it at that.
Dreaming aside, somehow I don’t think such
ideas will gain much traction in this culture of ours, entrenched as it is in
cherished rituals of competition and celebrity. We love our trophies perhaps
too much.
In any case, let’s
not forget the most unheralded winners of this art contest – the public viewing
community. They’re not charged an entry fee, and they get to see invaluable
evidence of extraordinary experiments and probative visions from another
remarkable community - Stark County’s artists. As a citizen of both communities, I
am doubly blessed.
Happy New Year.
Having been selected as a "first time" juror of a show this spring, I have been doing much reading on the subject. Your thoughts seem to hit the nail on the head. Each individual jurors expertice and level of connoisseurship will have a profound impact on how they develope their decisions. I am excited to see what lies ahead.
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