Dialects of Glossolalia?
Joanne Freeman, "Covers Cobalt" - etching |
Deborah Freedman, "Oaks and Oleandrs #1" - acrylic on polyester |
Joseph Haske, "Asterion #5" - acrylic on canvas |
Mark Saltz, Untitled - oil, resin, pigment on linen |
Marjorie VanDyke, "Ides #1" - oil on canvas |
By Tom Wachunas
“Abstract art is a fundamental distrust of
the theory of reality concocted by the eyes.” – Robert Brault
“One of the most striking of
abstract art’s appearances is her nakedness, an art stripped bare.” –
Robert Motherwell
“Abstract literally means to draw from or
separate. In this sense every artist is abstract... a realistic or
non-objective approach makes no difference. The result is what counts.” - Richard Diebenkorn
EXHIBIT: Painters Prints
/ works by Andrea Belag, Deborah Freedman, Joanne Freeman, Joseph Haske, Mark
Saltz, Marjorie VanDyke / at The Lemmon Gallery, located inside the Kent Stark
Fine Arts Building, 6000 Frank Avenue, North Canton, Ohio / THROUGH APRIL 6, 2019 / Gallery viewing
hours are Monday – Friday 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Gallery Talk: April
4, 3:30 p.m. / Artist Reception: April 4, 5–7p.m.
Aesthetics 101: Two-dimensional
art is a language of myriad dialects, both learned and intuited. When we say
that an artwork “speaks” to us, we affirm its capacity to take us into some
quiet state of perception that resonates with our own experience of existence. Mindful looking, or listening, if you will,
requires slowness, and begins with a surrender, founded upon our intentionality,
our willingness to be transported, perhaps even transformed. What the
artist makes becomes all the more compelling when it prompts us, the
viewers, to look at our world in a deeper way.
Now stretch your imagination to consider the
possibility that this highly captivating exhibition of abstract prints and
paintings by six accomplished New York City-based artists could be a variation of the phenomenon known as glossolalia (glôs-ō-lā’- lēə).
Here’s the Collins English
Dictionary definition of the term: 1. ecstatic or apparently ecstatic utterance of usually unintelligible
speechlike sounds, as in a religious assembly, viewed by some as a
manifestation of deep religious experience / 2. gift of tongues.
Glossolalia, or speaking
in tongues, is known in many cultures,
most of them ancient. In Christianity, for example, it is regarded as a
mystical language coming directly from God, and spontaneously voiced by
entranced worshippers. A communing with the divine. To the uninitiated or
insensitive, such utterances might well sound like gibberish.
Similarly, it’s no
secret that there are viewers who, in their passing rush to identify the
meaning of what they see only with their eyes, consider abstract art, particularly
of the non-objective sort, as the strictly proprietary language of artists
engaged in iconoclastic nonsense. Those who hold such a dismissive view are
probably looking too fast.
This is certainly
not to say that we should consider all artists as either the dispensers of mystical
experiences or the sole recipients of cryptic messages from on high. It’s not
entirely unreasonable, however, to regard artists such as those presented in
this marvelously diversified fete of abstractions as somehow akin to shamans,
or spirit-catchers. Think of them in a larger sense as curious gatherers of energies
and essences. As all visual artists do, the individuals in this exhibit have
made symbols, allegories, metaphors. These particular artists, however, have
channeled their personal encounters with corporeal realities and personal
memories into varying dialects that depart from conventional naturalism to
arrive at intriguing if not transcendent distillations.
Back to mindful
looking for a moment. Yes, there is a substantial presence of rarefied
quirkiness in this exhibit. So slow down. Let your intuition do the deciphering.
Here’s where the ordinary and the predictable get wrecked. It’s viewer-friendly
glossolalia.
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