Exquisite Ambiguities
By Tom Wachunas
Sometimes I get
the impression that Malone University’s Fine Arts Department wants to keep its
exhibitions a secret. Even the department’s web page isn’t current at the
moment. Were it not for the tip I received a few weeks ago from Malone graduate
Rick Huggett (whose recent work at Gallery 6000 was reviewed here on April 27),
I would not have visited the McFadden Gallery (lower level of the Johnson
Center) to see the gem of a show he put together there for the summer. That’ll
be the subject of the post following this one. After viewing it, I also saw the
nearby exhibit in the Fountain Gallery and was completely stunned by its
material and conceptual freshness – a freshness I don’t often encounter in these
parts.
“Interior
Landscapes” is the name of this show of eight black and white pencil drawings
on unbleached/unstretched muslin by Heather Bryson. At this point I can only
guess that they’ll be on view for the duration of the summer. The captivating
sound of falling water in the space’s fountain is the perfect complement to
these contemplative works. Deceivingly simple, sometimes sparse in content,
their substance nonetheless appears to breathe, literally and otherwise, as the
air movement in the exhibition space makes their sheer surfaces flutter ever so
gently against the wall.
In her statement posted with the show,
Bryson calls her drawings non-traditional self- portraits that began by imagining
the insides of her physical body, and evolved into somehow linking the imagery
up with - or drawing out – emotional energy or associations. The resulting
configurations delineate symbolic, organic landscapes of a kind, or perhaps
amorphous, surreal figures. In any case, they’re more lyrically suggestive than
formally illustrative of specific structures or feelings. Their spatial ambiguities add to their dichotomous
nature: morphing yet permanent, airy yet dense, seen yet unseen.
And for all of
their delicate, tentative appearance, these are solidly, refreshingly hypnotic
essences.
Photo: pencil drawings
on muslin by Heather Bryson, on view at Fountain Gallery, located in The
Johnson Center, Malone University, 2600 Cleveland Ave. NW
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