The Magnificent Miles Avenue Menagerieum (and other collected thoughts)
By Tom Wachunas
Two current
exhibits – “The Odditorium” at the Massillon Museum, and “The Creative Spirit”
at the Canton Museum of Art – have each inspired a mood to have some fun with
the notion of collecting. While I do plan to post something on both museum
shows sometime soon, I’m lately on a vacation from “serious” critique writing,
instead spending some down time ruminating (roominating?) on all the stuff
stuffed into my studio over the past ten years and otherwise on to the walls of
my modest but cozy Canton home.
For ‘stuff’ here,
read ‘my art works.’ One of the hats I where is that of Curator of Collections
at The Miles Avenue Menagerieum, located in the spectacular Northern reaches of
Perry Township, which boasts the world’s largest collection of Tom Wachunas
originals. I suspect there are more than a few artists in our midst who hold
similar positions related to their own accumulated works, no doubt situated in
somewhat fancier locales.
I also suspect that more than being
disappointed owners of the unsold (or unsellable) labors of our passions, we
are simply caretakers, unwilling to part with the lovingly wrought evidence of
those passions. When pressed, some of us might admit the gushy but poignant
cliché that these things which occupy the floors, shelves, or walls of our
domiciles are somehow our ‘children.’ Other than stealthily abandoning any of
them (with urgent “please give my child a good home” letter attached) at the
entrance of a legitimate art museum, trashing them outright would be tantamount
to murder. Looking at some of my more sordid practices of the 1980s, I guess
that makes me something of a serial killer.
Aside from the
aforementioned artworks of the past ten years, the only other seriously
collected objects in my life were vinyl recordings. Five thousand-plus of them.
That was at last count, which was toward the end of 1991, when I sold the
entire collection to a decidedly thrilled but stingy record dealer in Greenwich
Village. I was jobless, recently divorced, in debt, on the verge of being
homeless, and desperate for cash. Rows upon rows of meticulously organized
rock, jazz, classical, and international folk recordings, amassed over 20 years,
stacked majestically upright across long and sturdy wooden shelves, were gone
in an instant, sold by the foot for a pittance. For a considerably long time I
was heartbroken by the void of silence that ensued in my life. The music had
always spoken to me in one fashion or another.
No such void
exists for me today. What I call my studio, ridiculously tiny by many
standards, is really a haven for hearing what these strangely evolved aesthetic
contrivances have to say to me. They spoke to me when I made them, telling me
exactly what they wanted to be, and they continue to speak even as they gather
dust. Sometimes I imagine them conversing among themselves, rehearsing the critiques
and admonishments they will impart next time I’m in their presence. If they’re
children, then I’m eternally grateful I don’t have to feed them. In fact they
nourish me. And they often speak of how I should go about engineering the next
generation of their siblings.
I think it joyously ironic that the once long
shadow cast by the loss of my beloved audio collection has progressively faded
into the light of my current visual collection. Cluttered and disorganized to
be sure, it is a collection that nonetheless teaches me how to listen.
Photos: From the
studio wing of the Miles Avenue Menagerieum
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