Whirldscapes and Hortimorphs
Evening Bloom on view at Geez Mound, by Ehret and Francis Conjuring a Spirit Guide from the Hardware Store Parking Lot, by Ehret and Francis Sun Shower, by Steve Ehret Ate the Sun, by Steve Ehret Alter, by Steve Ehret Haze Glaze, by Kat Francis Meet Me for Records in the Club House, by Kat Francis Mr. Soul, by Kat Francis
By Tom Wachunas
“We hope to bring you into the play place of our
imagination, to live out the earthly magic of the subconscious mind. A place
for people to float, have fun and most importantly get weird. Climb hills, roll
down them, smell flowers, star gaze, pounce from earthy plateau to
plateau.” - Steve Ehret and Kat
Francis
EXHIBIT: POTION PARK – The Kaleidoscopic Garden of Steve
Ehret and Kat Francis / at Canton Museum of Art’s Milligan Gallery / 1001
Market Avenue N., Canton, Ohio / last day of the exhibit is March 5th
/ 330.453.7666 /
The Canton Museum of Art is open Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and
Thursdays from 10 a.m. – 8 p.m., Fridays and Saturdays 10 a.m. – 5 p.m., and
Sundays 1-5 p.m. Admission is free on Thursdays and the first Friday of
every month.
https://www.cantonart.org/exhibits/current
And again, here
comes that notoriously tardy blogger with a way-late vigorous nod in the
direction of two prominent local artists- Steve Ehret and Kat Francis. If
you’ve not yet seen their intriguing collaborative exhibit, there are still a
few days remaining.
So…”Kaleidoscopic” Garden, or “Collide -oh! – Scopic”
Garden? Here’s where the notion of potions comes into play. Depending on the
recipe, some potions may taste sweet, others bitter. They can be remedial
elixirs or toxic tinctures. The fantazzmagorical visions in this exhibit
combine elements of both, though never in a spirit of malevolence.
The mixed media assemblages
(acrylic paint on cut-out wood shapes) by Kat Francis are layered, 3D collages that
have a scrapbook souvenir quality about then. Her painting style is charming
and direct, sometimes almost childlike. A recurring motif is an embedded face
in profile (her own?) which appears to ingest, or spew out, floating snippets
of natural scenery. The eye is peering out beyond the picture plane as if
meditating, searching, or remembering.
Steve Ehret’s strange oil landscapes are
painted with a sumptuous fluidity that makes
his forms appear to breathe and bounce. Here’s nature morphed into a wondrous
waltz of curly puddles, pods and petals; rippling rocks rising and falling;
wriggling stones, wiggling stems; and all in rainbow colors that glow from the
inside with light stolen from an unseen sun.
Strangeness comes
into even sharper focus when both artists partner together in one painting,
such as in Evening Bloom on View at Geez Mound, or Conjuring a Spirit
Guide from the Hardware Store Parking Lot. Looking at them is like tumbling into the
proverbial rabbit hole of altered realities. They’re dreamy and disorienting,
yet not downright nightmarish. Surreal, certainly, but not so much sinister as
they are sly. Like a fox.
Begging your
pardon, Kat Francis and Steve Ehret never promised us a rose garden. Still, stop
and smell the weird. Eye think you’re sure to find the aroma simply…curiouser
and curiouser.
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