The Weekly Volcano, May 1,2014
Art
is most effective when it can evoke the essence or the spirit, of a person,
place or event without necessarily looking like that person, place or event.
More often than not it is most effective when it does not look like the subject
because illusory depiction often detracts from the core of the artistic
statement. Coastal Alchemy at Museum
of Glass beautifully, inventively and powerfully evokes the natural world of
our Pacific Northwest in painting, sculpture and poetry by artists Anna
Skibska, Meg Holgate and Trenton Flock.
To
borrow words from the press release: “With lead artist Anna Skibska creating
glass collages and sculptural installations, Meg Holgate contributing her
luminous landscape paintings, and poet T.S. Flock’s visual poetry, Coastal Alchemy offers visitors three
different but interwoven perspectives on the region. Central to their
collaboration is a sense of being on the edge, on the margin of the continent,
between land and sea, surrounded by nature. A similar affinity for the sense of
place in the Northwest characterized the so-called Northwest Mystics.”
Flock’s
visual poetry is the first thing that meets the eye upon entering the gallery. Approximately
120 cadenza sheets are suspended by shimmering wires across the wall that faces
the entry. Handwritten lines of poetry fill these sheets. Are the words of the
poem written on a wall text or in a catalog? If so, I missed it, and it is
impossible to read the words as they are displayed; but visually it is
beautiful and luminous and sets the mystical tone of the exhibition.
To
the right are two large galleries filled with Skibska’s glass sculpture,
collages and works on paper and other mixed media. To the left stand two more
large galleries filled with paintings and stacked rocks in display cases by
Holgate.
With
minimalist forms and subdued colors, Holgate captures the feel of our streams
and forests in quiet reverence. Some of the paintings are on glass or on
surfaces that combine paper and glass. They are majestic and simple. The
softness of her painting is awe inspiring. There are paintings that are little
more than a series of vertical forms representing tree trunks, one called
“Moonshine IV” that looks like a space ship, and a painting of a rock barely
visible in the mist but which casts a hard-edged black shadow. These are
astounding paintings.
Skibska’s
sculptures and collages are almost indescribable even though some of them have
very clearly defined subject matter. There are portrait heads, animals and
other figures on glass, paper and other materials, with words attached on and
near the paintings in such a way as to obscure any sense of where one work
stops and another begins while lending additional meaning to the works. And
suspended from the ceiling in front of or nearby each piece is a kind of mesh
glass grid that takes the form of, variously, boxes, balls and clouds, or like
crystalline spider webs that shimmer in the light and cast intriguing shadows
that partially obscure the imagery on the walls. Walking through these two
galleries that house Skibska’s work is like taking a stroll along a beach at
the edge of a forest — a beach that is littered with driftwood, gnarled tree
trunks and rocks. There are no beginnings and no ends. There is humor, there is
beauty, there is mystery; there is the essence of nature without slavishly
copying the look of trees and mountains and bodies of water.
This,
in my humble opinion, is the most engaging exhibition I have seen at MOG sense
the show of Richard Craig Meitner’s strange vessels three years ago.
[Museum of Glass, Coastal Alchemy, Wednesday-Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Sunday, noon to 5 p.m., through Sept. 28, 1801 Dock St. Tacoma, (866) 468-7386 http://museumofglass.org]
Sunday, noon to 5 p.m., through Sept. 28, 1801 Dock St. Tacoma, (866) 468-7386 http://museumofglass.org]
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