A Compelling Tribute
A Lot of Energy Makes a Little Matter, by Jack McWhorter Ladders and Holes, by Mal McCrea You Paint Like a Sculptor, by Alexis Huntsman Transitions, by Kim Blankenship The Light You Carry, by Emily Orsich Promise Land, by Keri Graham Because (l), Why (r), by Samuel Gentile Millennium Simulation, by Alaska Thompson
By Tom Wachunas
“The act of painting is a clash of different worlds, which in their conflict with each other create new worlds. For me, one of the most intriguing aspects of the studio is the quest for making paintings that have an equivalence in two or more directions. The paintings derive from a system of metaphors drawn from physical science. A kind of blank slate which allows me to describe what I think I know about existing in time and space, history and nature.” -Jack McWhorter (1950 – 2022)
EXHIBIT: Forward Formations: Students Celebrate the Life
of Jack McWhorter / at Patina Arts Centre, 324 Cleveland Ave. NW, downtown
Canton, Ohio / THROUGH FEB. 25, 2023 / Viewing hours Thursdays Noon to 8 p.m.,
Saturdays Noon to 9 p.m.
PARTICIPATING ARTISTS:
Sarah Amatangelo, Kimberly Blankenship, Jessica Bracken, Noah DiRuzza,
Samuel Gentile, Casey Herndon, Rita Hoagland, Nick Hoover, Alexis Huntsman,
Kristi Karickhoff, Azia Mae Layman, Keri Marie, Madi Miller, Daniel McLaughlin,
David McDowell, Sarah Flower-McVey, Mal McCrea, Jack McWhorter, Emily Orsich,
Justin Randall, Natalie Swonger, Brandy Torch, Alaska Thompson, Kaley Weaver,
Megan Wanderer, David Whiteman
Students once under
the tutelage of Painter and Professor Jack McWhorter, who passed away on May 1,
2022, have come together to celebrate his life and legacy through a shared
exhibition. Jack was a prolific and accomplished artist, and a beloved,
influential teacher of painting for 32 years at Kent State University at Stark.
Each artist in this thoughtful and compelling tribute - which includes some paintings
by McWhorter - created a work of art inspired by one of his pieces.
At the
core of McWhorter’s aesthetic is a persistent navigation of tensions and
harmonies within symbiotic dualities. His compositions, which he called “live
surfaces,” are clusters or matrixes of lines, shapes, and patterns that
juxtapose accumulations and singularities, gatherings and dispersals. Like an
explorer’s field notes on remembered sights and sites, places and spaces, his
pictures often entwine a then with a now, as if remembering their own
beginnings even as they were being transformed by his intuition and imagination
into wholly new visual moments.
New visual moments. The artists in this
exhibit haven’t settled for merely copying an exact style, technique or content
of a McWhorter original. After all, this exhibit is about inspiration, not
imitation. Amidst the great diversity of formal approaches here, there is
nonetheless a palpable sense of kindred spirits speaking in their own distinctive
dialects, connecting to the act of making art with passion and panache.
The very walls of
Patina Arts Centre have indeed become live surfaces.
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