Some Enlivening Locutions
detail - "May I Share A Word With You" by Judi Krew |
"May I Share A Word With You" by Judi Krew |
(left) "Murders in the Rue Morgue" by William Bogdan (right) "Our Weapon is Truth" by Sally Lytle |
"Lavish Lilies I" by Diane Belfiglio |
"Small Reflections" by Christopher Triner |
"DeDeKind" by David Kuntzman |
"A Place in the Mountains" by Isabel Zaldivar |
By Tom Wachunas
“The aim of art is to represent not the outward appearance of things, but their inward significance.” – Aristotle
EXHIBIT: 79th ANNUAL MAY SHOW/ at LITTLE ART GALLERY, located in The North Canton Public Library, 185 North Main Street, North Canton, Ohio/ Viewing hours: Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m. to 8 p.m., Fri. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. / THROUGH JUNE 4, 2022
From Merriam-Webster, definition of locution:
lo·cu·tion | \ lō-ˈkyü-shən (noun)
1: a particular form of expression or a peculiarity of
phrasing
especially : a word or expression characteristic of a
region, group, or cultural level
2: style of discourse : PHRASEOLOGY
Jurors Allyssa Hixenbaugh and Elizabeth Taylor
have written that they had “not an easy
task” in selecting a scant 28 artworks from more than 130 submissions to this
hallowed annual ritual. While I was consequently disappointed by the absence of
3D sculptural works on view (with one notable exception – more on that later), I’m
happy and grateful to report that one of my monochrome 2D mixed media collages,
Politics and Religion, did make the harvest, so to speak. I wrote about
that piece in late 2020, and here’s a link to the post if you care to revisit:
http://artwach.blogspot.com/2020/11/description-and-de-scription.html
This year’s May Show crop once again heavily
favors art of the representational sort, with very little in the way of
nonobjective abstraction. In that genre, David Kuntzman’s acrylic painting, DeDeKind,
is a stunning mathematical mind-bender. Its complex layers of interlocking
angled grids seemingly move forward and recede all at once in a suggestion of
infinite spatial depth.
As a
whole, the show feels somewhat safe, as in quietly academic and traditional.
This is certainly not to say it lacks technical or conceptual excellence. Several
of the most compelling pictures depict the natural world, including landscapes.
You might call them diverse narratives, or locutions of locations. Among those,
Isabel Zaldivar’s wild, loosely painted acrylic, A Place in the Mountains,
exudes a raucous joy with its harmonized planes of electrifying complementary
hues. A much tighter method of layered mark-making imbues Christopher J.
Triner’s acrylic painting, Small Reflections, with an enchanting sense
of sparkling luminosity – a woods enlivened with magical, lambent light. And the
remarkable precision of lines, organic shapes, and saturated color all unite to
make Diane Belfiglio’s watercolor, Lavish Lilies I, an altogether
breathtaking ode to delicate, sunlit textures.
Elsewhere in the
mix, two small portraits mounted side-by-side make for a sobering contrast in considering
the darker if not more solemn side of existence in modern times. One is downright
morose, the other poignant and contemplative.
In William Bogdan’s raw, bluntly rendered etching, Murders in the Rue Morgue
– The Moment Before, a monstrous, wrinkled hand rests on the neck and
shoulder of a woman in profile. Her eyes look to the edge of death. The moment
before indeed. To the right, the girl in Sally Lytle’s gently fluid oil
painting, Our Weapon is Truth, looks directly at us, her
dark-eyed gaze at once mournful and expectant. Cutting across her neck and
shoulders is an edge, where the blue and yellow fields of the Ukrainian flag
meet, and here mix into a wispy swipe of green. Green, the color of growth, of
hope? The promise of a life, like this painting, not yet finished?
And finally,
on another Ukrainian / global note, there’s the exhibit’s sole sculptural – and
most arresting - entry: Judi Krew’s interactive, life-sized robed figure called May I share a word with you? The piece has
a lot to say. In 73 languages. Here are
Krew’s words about her work :
“One World * One People * One Voice.
This coat contains 94 words in 73 different languages. The words are: Peace
– Care – Kindness – Hope - Faith – Hello. Viewers are encouraged to gently lift
any necktie piece and discover the word rendered and its language of origin.
The more we learn, the more we will become a world of understanding and peace.
The headpiece is based on the traditional ceremonial dress of the Ukrainian
people. It contains three words to be shared: Peace - Freedom - Assistance.
Materials for both: black out curtains, necktie skeletons, spray paint, shirt
scraps, thread, embroidery floss, buttons, labels and crochet remnants on the
headpiece.”
Krew’s materials
and methods are themselves a grand and eloquent locution, literally and
symbolically, of the ties that bind our longings for connectivity and unity in
times of unspeakable turmoil.
No comments:
Post a Comment