Dazzling
Devotions
Merv Corning, Baker's Table with Brass and Silver |
Merv Corning, The Bath |
Merv Corning, October - Wyeth Farm |
J.D. Titzel, Harmony Church |
J.D. Titzel, Nuthatch |
J.D. Titzel, Remnant Tractor |
J.D. Titzel, Orchard Truck |
By
Tom Wachunas
“Painting
is possessed of divine power, for not only does it make the absent present, but
also makes the dead almost alive.” - Leon Battista Alberti
“There are no half measures when it comes to
watercolour. Watercolour demands constant devotion.” -Pierre Tougas
EXHIBITS: Reflections: The Artistic Spirit
of Merv Corning / Patient Work: Watercolors by J.D.Titzel / at The Canton
Museum of Art (CMA), 1001 Market Avenue N. / THROUGH AUGUST 2, 2020 / Hours: Tuesdays-Fridays 10a.m. to 4p.m. /
FREE ADMISSION THROUGH AUG.2 / 330.453.7666
/ visitors should pre-schedule their
viewing time and reserve tickets at
The following
two paragraphs are excerpted from CMA Exhibition statements:
“… In fact,
the NFL first contacted Corning (American, 1926-2006) in 1966-67 for watercolor
illustration work; their relationship would span 30 years, with Corning becoming,
as the NFL put it, "football's pre-eminent artist”…This major
retrospective exhibition honors Merv Corning’s importance as an American master
of art—particularly watercolor…Reflections
showcases not only works from CMA's Merv Corning Collection, but also works
from private collections and museums around the country…”
“Largely self-taught watercolor artist, J.D.
Titzel, has drawn and painted since high school. He began his college career as
an art major at Wittenberg University but found he couldn’t connect with the
largely popular abstract movement…When he paints in watercolor, Titzel builds
color slowly in very thin layers of paint. Some areas are 2-3 layers while
others are attained in 10 or more layers. This gives the painting more nuances
and depth than a single color can achieve…”
Once upon a
time, in a confused mentality far, far away, I was often too cavalier in
dismissing watercolorists in general as so many dabblers, casual amateurs, Sunday-painter
hobbyists. Mea maxima culpa.
Due largely to
CMA’s ongoing and admirable commitment to collecting and exhibiting significant
American watercolor works from the 19th century and forward, I’ve come to savor
the medium’s unique character. Many painters, accomplished and otherwise, can
attest to its unforgiving nature, its daunting technical demands, and the
skills required to meet them effectively. In the disciplined hands of masterful
painters such as Merv Corning and J.D.Titzel, the medium is magical.
Their pictures are representational in nature,
speaking a language most would categorize, understandably enough, as realism. But as with any language, there
can be differing dialects, accents,
inflections. And that’s evident here. While both artists engage the same
vocabulary and basic grammar – identifiable subjects from the visible world –
there are subtle but distinct differences in the artists’ syntactic practices.
Among the most
captivating elements in the works by both of these painters is the uncanny
illusionism of tactile surfaces. The precision of nuanced detail is at times
astonishing.
But those
details can be rendered in different kinds of light. The way Corning laid in
his crystalline illumination often gave his colors a surprising solidity and
brilliance. The light in Titzel’s works tends to be a bit more diffused, though
certainly no less captivating. His visions feel wrapped in a softness, a
meditative quietude.
Looking at
these works induced in me the sensation of reading the artists’ personal
narratives. Here are stories of their passionate devotions to closely observing
their surrounds, their willingness to be immersed in what they were looking at.
Here is the joyous eloquence of the practiced, indeed patient hand, and the
unwavering eyes that can find profound poetry in even the simplest of things.
So these
aren’t just pictures. They’re vessels of transportation. They can take us to
that spellbinding place where we too can be immersed in our own act of seeing.
Tom, Thank you for your kind comments. It was a great experience having a show of my work at the Canton Museum of Art. And likewise reading your blog. Thank you. J.D. Titzel
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