Top row (l. to r.) Fear, Opposition, Anger Middle row: Loss (1.), Vader, Loss Bottom row: Hate, Betrayal, Suffering |
Clockwise from top left: Air, Fire, Water, Earth |
Bowie |
Treebeard (self portrait) |
By Tom Wachunas
“Every portrait that is painted with feeling is a portrait of the artist, not
of the sitter. The sitter is merely the accident, the occasion. It is not he
who is revealed by the painter; it is rather the painter who, on the coloured
canvas, reveals himself.” ― Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray
“There comes a time when the painting is no longer about likeness, but about
memory, emotion, and expression.” -Scott Alan Evans
EXHIBIT: VISAGE – new portraits by Scott Alan Evans, at The Hub Art Factory, 336
6th Street NW, downtown Canton. NOTE: There are two remaining dates for viewing
this exhibit: Open Studio night on Tuesday, June 14, 7:30 p.m. - 10:00 p.m., and
Closing night, Friday June 17, starting at 5:00 p.m.
What do you consider to be
an excellent painted portrait? What impresses you, enthralls you, pulls you in?
Is it a perfectly executed physiognomy, an astonishing “likeness”? Is it the
skillfully refined lineaments of mesmerizing mien or dignified deportment?
Flawless tromp l’oeil technique?
You’ll find nothing of that ilk here. The brush
that Scott Alan Evans wields isn’t a magic wand. He doesn’t conjure fool-the-eye
illusions. His representational methodology isn’t one of micro-managed
naturalism. It is on the other hand a substantially pared-down, albeit
expressive sort of boldly colored realism.
Evans never lets us lose sight of the
materiality of (acrylic) paint itself: viscous, tactile, moveable, at once
liquid and solid, thick and thin. Paint as a primal conduit for channeling the
energy of the artist’s gestural hand – the hand that can invest a face, whether
still living, passed, or fictional, with a visceral life of its own.
For as much
as we might approach these portraits with any number of aesthetic
predispositions or expectations, they approach us. Unfussy, honest and
disarming, they are purely… present. Some might call Evans’ raw, simple style
naïve. I call it brave.
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