Cosmeclipsetudes
Ladders to the Sky, by Emily Vigil Starlight, by Iszy Ucker Rare December Moon, by Clare Murray Adams Just a Phase, by Tom Delameter Eclipse, by Orenda Meraky My Big Night Sky, By BZTAT Celestial Totality, By Bztat We are Stardust, by Sally Lytle
By Tom Wachunas
“…Art moves us to experience nature and scientific
phenomena with emotional depth in a way that reaches beyond its scientific
narrative. Through art, we are moved to engage with nature and scientific
phenomena on a level that transcends mere facts, reaching into the realms of
heartfelt connections and emotional resonance…” – from the artist/curator
statement by Vicki Boatright (AKA the artist BZTAT)
EXHIBIT: CELESTIAL- Exploring Cosmic Curiosities in Art /
at Canton Creator Space/
BZTAT Studios Gallery, 730 Market Avenue S., Canton, Ohio / THROUGH MAY 24,
2024 / Hours: Mon.-Fri. 11:00a.m.-5:00pm., Saturday 12:00-5:00p.m.
Participating artists: Clare Murray Adams, BZTAT, Brenda Case, Tom Delameter, Laura Hollis, Sally Priscilla Lytle, Iszy Rucker, Keeli Serri, Sarah Shumaker, Scott Simler, Emily Vigil, Tom Wachunas, Chris Wurst.
You may
recall my post here from March 30, regarding my newest artwork. I made it specifically for inclusion in this
engaging group show which was in turn originally motivated by a truly cosmic
drama – the total solar eclipse that riveted our regional attentions on April 8.
In case you missed reading my thoughts, feel free to click on this link:
https://artwach.blogspot.com/2024/03/in-path-of-totality.html
Meanwhile, here’s
an invitation to re-direct your attentions to the other artworks on view at
Canton Creator Space. Forging their own paths of totality, so to speak, the
participating artists have delivered a delightful and impressively eclectic range of appreciations
for things celestial.
One of BZTAT’s paintings,
called My Big Night Sky, looks something like a birthday cake, decorated
with icing in rainbow colors and textures of candied curls and clusters,
floating like so many stars amidst a scripted message: My Night Sky You are
So Big and I am so small. I look up at you. All seems Quiet and Still. I paint
you as though you are Noisy. Are You Real? Am I? A child’s sweet
meditation? Yumm. Tasting the universe with awe and wonder.
A black(s)- and-
white acrylic painting by Tom Delameter, called Just a Phase,” is imbued
with all the stark, documentary matter-of-factness of a satellite photo. Yet in
all of its dark simplicity, the picture is nevertheless dramatic, powerful in
its compositional elegance, and alluring in its capture of a stunning, splintered
arc of blazing light.
What I find
especially compelling (and beautiful, in its strange way) about Clare Murray
Adams’ mixed media painting and collage, Rare December Moon, is its enigmatic
nature. I’m moonstruck by its mystery. Here’s an all-at-onceness of things in
the process of becoming both revealed and hidden, present and covered over, of
materials seemingly sewn together, then disintegrating. Maybe this isn’t so
much an illustration or picture as such, but more a codified visual poem about
answers as well as unanswerable questions.
The ambitious,
hovering sculpture by Iszy Ucker, called Starlight, is a monstrous blossom
that hangs down from the ceiling. A glittery flying conTRAPtion. Ucker tells us
in her statement that she was inspired by carnivorous plants such as Venus Fly
Traps and their ability to lure prey. She compares the position of viewers standing
under it and looking upward to that of stargazers. ”Once in position,” she
writes, “they will be in the mouth of the beast and will soon be consumed.” Consumed, we can certainly hope, by our
insatiable curiosity.
Sally Lytle’s arresting
abstraction, We are Stardust, is, like the solar eclipse itself, a dramatic,
ephemeral moment loaded with magical lyricism. Here’s a human form and face, fused
with, but then emerging from, a celestial occurrence of light obscured by darkness
and shadow. I read Lytle’s painting as a
symbolic declaration of hope for ”the human condition.” Our light can be
temporarily dimmed, but never wholly extinguished by circumstance. The light.
Always the light.
Considering the
overall theme of this exhibit, Emily Vigil’s painting, Ladders to the Sky, is
surprisingly small – about 4” x 2” I’m guessing. Call it microcosmic. So grid
and bear it – this palm-sized snapshot, this tiny totem. In the grand panoply of astral phenomena
across the known universe, what we saw in the sky here on April 8 was, comparatively
speaking, a miniscule, albeit mesmerizing, episode.
In its distinctive
smallness, Vigil’s piece remains after all a large reminder, as is this show in
general. We make art for its wondrous potential to let us remember and savor everything
about our very aliveness. What we see, what we feel, what we touch,
and what touches us. Art allows the events that befall us, whether common or
rare, whether of our own making or not, to be ever-present, well beyond their
time and place of origin.
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