Weldon Butler and Carla Keaton at B2 Fine Art
Published in Weekly Volcano, May 5, 2016
“Bull Moose,” graphite drawing by Weldon Butler, courtesy B2 Fine Art Gallery |
I am
continually surprised by the museum-quality art Gary and Deborah Boone bring to
B2 Fine Art. Very few commercial galleries, especially not in smaller cities
such as Tacoma, can mount shows such as B2’s recent showing of works by Faith
Ringgold and Aminah Robinson or bring in top-notch artists such as Weldon
Butler, whose drawings and one relief sculpture are currently on exhibition
along with paintings by a slightly lesser-known artist, Carla Keaton. The
Boone’s also do Tacoma a great favor by showing works by leading
African-American artists, not exclusively but more consistently than any other
gallery.
Butler is an established artist originally
from Philadelphia, who moved to Seattle 40 years ago to study under Jacob
Lawrence. From that, one might expect narrative art in the same vein as
Lawrence’s work. But what he learned from Lawrence was evidently not story
telling through art. Butler’s work is abstract, pure, and minimalist — not in
the traditions established by Lawrence and Ringgold, which are anything but
minimalist, but more in the tradition of Ellsworth Kelly and Al Held, with a
line quality like Henri Matisse.
A wall statement by Butler explains that in
the contour drawings he is “expressing two points of focus, beginning and
returning to the same point and variation of line formation.”
There are four large, simple abstract
drawings in the front gallery. In each there are curvilinear shapes tracing an
open contour that delineates paths that double back on themselves in ways that
defy logic and perspective. You can’t tell where they begin or end. They are
sensual shapes drawn with a smooth and highly controlled line and very little
shading. In contrast to the graphite lines on white paper, he throws in a few
flat gray shapes. Many of these drawings look like studies for sculpture.
In the middle gallery there is a small
drawing of a rectangular cube in black, white and gray graphite that defies
normal perspective, and there is a wall-size drawing called “Colossus” that
hangs a couple of feet out from the wall and stretches across the gallery
(146-by-42 inches). Like his other drawings, “Colossus” is mostly contour with
a minimum of shaded areas. The shapes are rhythmical and seem to march or dance
from left to right to what looks like a brick sidewalk that “walks” the
viewer’s eye off the paper.
All of Butler’s drawings are strong and
simple with a great touch for asymmetric balance and in-and-out movement in
shallow space. It is minimalist abstraction of the highest order.
“The Care Taker,” painting by Carla Keaton, courtesy B2 Fine Art Gallery |
Keaton’s work is all painting, some in
acrylic and some in oil, and all cubistic and in black and white. There is a
series of paintings of chairs that have been broken down into planes and wedges
and play with dimensionality within a mostly flat format (there are a few
constructed areas that jut out from the wall an inch or two). There are also
three abstract figurative paintings: one a picture of two kids sitting on the
bumper of a Volkswagen, one of two VWs, and a life-size portrait of a woman
called “Portrait of a Single Mother.” Each of these is also in a cubist style.
I was not overly impressed with Keaton’s
paintings because I did not find anything original or personal in them. The
more I think about them, the more I think the portrait of the woman is her
strongest painting. I also Googled Keaton and saw I lot of other paintings of
families and individuals that were better than what is shown in this
exhibition, so I encourage you to look at some of these online, and maybe B2
can bring her back with some of her figure paintings.
Symbiosis
in Black & White, 11 a.m. to 5
p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, till 9 p.m. Third Thursdays, through June 11, B2
Gallery, 711 St. Helens Avenue, Tacoma, 253.238.5065.
.
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