Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Real Eyezations


Real Eyezations







By Tom Wachunas

   EXHIBIT: Landscapes of the Other Realms /  Encounter new worlds from the minds of contemporary sci/fi visionaries as they transport you to other-worldly realms, with works by nationally and internationally known artists including Jody Fallon, Allen Panakal, Matt Mrowka, Steve Ehret, Armand Cabrera, Bob Eggleton, and Kristin Kest / at IKON IMAGES: The Illustration Gallery, 221 Fifth Street NW in downtown Canton, Ohio, THROUGH OCTOBER 12, 2018 /  

Click on this link to see works in the exhibit: 


    Here in 2018, determining what is most excellent or compelling in the art of painting can be a downright quixotic endeavor. Think of this postmodern  era’s aesthetics as a vast ideological landscape dotted – or littered, depending upon your perspective – with theories, philosophies, -isms and trends that can either command  lasting affections or be as fleeting as smoke from a dying fire. I think it fair to say that all of them are driven by an often desperate yearning to identify relevant meaning and purpose in art.

   These days, for better or worse, more and more folks seem to want the artful products of their yearning to be entertaining in the same way a blockbuster film might convincingly transport us to otherworldly times and places. Ahh, the eternal allure of illusion. Or delusion? 

   Contexts, subtexts, and pretexts in the realm of contemporary painting can be like so many windmills, some spinning smoothly in the friendly zephyrs of sleek representational imagery, others spasmodic in the rarefied air of painterly abstraction. I’ve tilted at both – finding that the former can be really beautiful, the latter really sublime. 

    In boldly going where many have gone before, this exhibit at Ikon Images is nevertheless a very entertaining pastiche of fantasy art and sci-fi illustration. That said, the paintings I find most enthralling – particularly those by Matt Mrowka, Aaron Miller, Steve Ehret, and Armand Cabrera - are those which don’t disguise their paintedness.  In varying degrees they breathe with presence of the artist’s hand, the physicality of pigments, the tactile traces of the moving brush, the choreography of colors thick and thin, pushed and pulled. Their iconography may be ‘otherwordly’ but their materiality is of the moment, our here and now. Two worlds, conjoined.  

   And so it is that in the spirit of different-strokes-for-different- folks, I leave you with the following quotes. You may or may not agree with the perspectives they offer. In any case, as you tilt with this exhibit, consider them as grist to the mill of your looking.

   “Realism and abstractionism are not enemies. They eat out of the same dish, but their digestive systems are different.”  - Leo Stein

“Realistic work can be just as abstract as the 'abstract' work... It's just covered by camouflage.”   -Janet Toney

  “Interesting is when one can produce a picture that is pretty, but with undercurrents. The metaphor that comes to mind is in the poems of Robert Frost.”  - Jamie Wyeth

  “realism, n. The art of depicting nature as it is seen by toads. The charm suffusing a landscape painted by a mole, or a story written by a measuring-worm.”  - Ambrose Bierce 

   “Photo-realistic painting is to impressionism what a ballroom waltz is to Argentine tango. Once you've done tango, the waltz seems stilted, controlled and oh so dull. Give me the passion, the sexiness and the bravura of the tango, thank you very much.”   - Brenda Behr

   “Any number of holier-than-thou honorable realists walk around in the belief that they have accomplished something, simply because they tell you for the hundredth time that a field is green and a red-painted house is painted red.”  - Edvard Munch

   “Representational painting doesn't need a social or political subtext to be important or to be appreciated.”   - Jeremy Lipking

   “Fantasy is escapist, and that is its glory. If a soldier is imprisoned by the enemy, don't we consider it his duty to escape?. . .If we value the freedom of mind and soul, if we're partisans of liberty, then it's our plain duty to escape, and to take as many people with us as we can!”  ― J.R.R. Tolkien

   PHOTOS, from top: 1. Dragon of Red Rock Canyon, by Aaron Miller, oil on board / 2. The Adventurers, by Armand Cabrera, oil on board / 3. Galway Road, by Matt Mrowka, oil on Masonite / 4. Thaw the Scarecrows, by Matt Mrowka, oil on Masonite / 5. Wild, by Steve Ehret, oil on canvas / 6. Grey Matters, by Steve Ehret, oil on canvas

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