The Weekly Volcano, Aug. 15, 2013
Among
the new artists showing at Matter in Olympia are Mark Randall, Steven Suski,
Rachel Juzeler and Lita Kenyon. Suski is certainly not new to Olympia, but he
has some new works in Matter that are exciting. They are paintings of rock
stars in acrylic on long play vinyl records. Among the musicians pictured are
Curt Cobain, Pete Townsend of the Who, and Joey Ramone. They are not precise
portraits but rather highly expressive paintings with heavy paint application —
a style in keeping with the raw stylings of the musicians. Cobain is playing
his guitar while a winged angel stands behind him.
“Almost Joan Again,” mixed media on galvanized metal, by Mark Randall, courtesy Matter Gallery |
“Genuine Hickory,” Kiln formed glass with inclusions, found handles and frame, metal and fiber, by Rachel Juzeler, courtesy Matter Gallery |
“Curt Cobain,” acrylic on vinyl recordl, by Steven Suskil, courtesy Matter Gallery |
Randall,
who has been chosen to do the cover illustration for the Olympia Film Festival,
has a large group of pop art paintings, mostly of women including some pop
celebrities from the ’60s, the heyday of pop art. Interestingly, although the
colors and the subject matter and the straight-forward compositions are
hallmarks of pop, his paint application is defiantly rough and expressive.
Rather than the sleek and machine-like look expected of such imagery, Randall’s
paintings look like old and worn signs that could have been out in the weather
since Bridget Bardot and twiggy were hot young stars.
Rachel
Juzeler, an artist from Alaska, creates kiln-formed and cast glass tools
assembled with wood, metal, and fiber details.
She says she is inspired by the antiquity and ruins of her surroundings.
She is showing a collection of glass and wood hammers, files and hatchets, each
displayed on a mesh screen within an old frame. Although recognizable tools
that are still commonly in use, they look like antiques. They also remind me
quite a bit of the great pop artist Jim Dine, who coincidentally now lives at
least part-time in Walla Walla.
Kenyon
(whose works are so new to Matter that they have not yet been added to the
gallery website) is showing a couple of very sensitive figure studies with
lyrically smooth contour lines and delicate shading offset with collage
elements such as words glued in as in a cut-and-paste ransom note. These are
beautifully executed drawings that, in yet another interesting coincidence,
look a lot like some of Jim Dine’s drawings.
Representing more than 100 artists,
Matter specializes in but is not limited to works with recycled materials. Perhaps
Suski best epitomized the Matter philosophy with his statement: “I like to find too. Things
on the street, stuff that might be thrown away, or the objects that I collect,
I find an artistic use for. The magic of making something from nothing or
putting separate parts together to make a unique whole is what fuels my art.”
[Matter Gallery, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday and noon
to 5 p.m. Sunday and Tuesday, closed Monday, 422 Washington St. SE, Olympia, 360.943.1760]
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