Raging emotions on display
by Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, July 15, 2019
“Nachtgespenster” and “Family Separation,” sculptures by Irene Osborn, photo by Rachel Payne |
There are certain characteristics shared by most
if not all juried art exhibitions that are particularly noticeable at
top-quality shows such as those held annually at South Puget Sound Community
College and Tacoma Community College where many of the same artists show up
every year. Such shows have a plethora of outstanding art, but a good half of
the works are just OK — not bad at all, but not work that makes you want to run
out in the streets and sing their praises at the top of your lungs.
Both TCC and SPSCC are currently having their annual juried shows. I
haven’t yet seen the show at SPSCC but plan to soon. In this column I will
concentrate on the works in the show in Tacoma, which incidentally includes a
lot of Olympia artists. And I shall concentrate on the pieces that do make you
want to rush out and sing their praises.
“Playing (Cuenic).” by William Turner |
"Agony," clay, paint and limestone by Mary Beth Hynes |
Tops among these is William Turner’s little painting “Playing (Cuenic).”
At first glance, this painting brought to mind paintings by the great British
abstract painter Howard Hodgkin, but Turner’s painting is much grittier and
more complex that anything of Hodgkin’s, and to my way of thinking, more
exciting. There are shapes within shapes. A deep cerulean blue rectangle in the
upper left corner plays off against a large backwards “L” shape filling the
rest of the surface. The blue area is like a window into the depths of night.
The rest is like old city billboards that have been ripped and tattered showing
multiple layers. Both sections are filled with architectonic and organic shapes
and marks. The colors range from burning bright to shadowy dark areas, and the
paint application is gritty and heavy in places and smooth and blended in
others. Seldom will you see so much variety of shape, color, line and
mark-making in a single little painting. If I were the juror and were tasked
with choosing “Best in Show,” I would have to give this one serious
consideration.
Lynette Charters’ “Missing Woman” series has become so ubiquitous it is
hard to say anything new about them. There are three in the TCC show and at
least one in the South Puget Sound show. In this series, Charters both honors
and criticizes male painters for their paintings of women that objectify their
subjects, while women artists are ‘missing” in so many museums and galleries.
She paints almost exact copies of master paintings of women on wood panels but
leaves the women’s bodies unpainted. I believe I have seen every painting in
the series and therefore can say the jurors chose her three best: “DeKooning’s
Muse,” “Yves Klien’s Petite Muse Blue” and “Picasso’s Seated Bather Muse.”
Mary Beth Hynes’s “Agony,” clay, paint and limestone, is a tableau of
five small sculptures of male and female nudes in stressful and agonizing
postures with rough bodies in positions that would be painful were they living
people. The emotional impact of these figures is akin to that of Michelangelo’s
sculptures of slaves or Rodin’s “Gates of Hell.” Taken separately, these
figures might be in the “OK” category, but as a group they are shout-it-in-the-street
powerful.
Similar in terms of emotional impact are Irene Osborne’s two sculpted
heads “Family Separation” and “Nachtgespenster.” One is the fully rounded
figure of a shouting head, and the other is a bas relief wall-mounted face that
is split down the middle. It is great to see how the two relate visually.
Special notice should also be given to Robert Thomas’s portrait of the
writer James Baldwin and Jeffree Stewart’s oil painting “Standing Symbol,” one
of Stewart’s best yet.
17th Annual Juried Local Art Exhibition, noon to 5 p.m. Monday-Thursday,
through Aug. 9, Tacoma Community College, Building 5A, entrance off South 12th
Street between Pearl and Mildred, Tacoma, visitor parking in Lot G.
1 comment:
Thank you, Alec, for this review and especially your comments on the Bill Turner painting. You sent me to Google to find out more about Howard Hodgkin, and I agree: Bill's painting are more complex, more layered. I am delighted to have purchased this painting, and I will keep your comments in mind as I appreciate it daily.
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