Published in the Weekly Volcano, Nov. 6, 2014
R. Owen Cummings |
Simon Kogan is locally famous in Olympia for his World War
II memorial on the Capitol Campus and for the larger-than-life statue of a
pregnant woman, “Motherhood,” at Percival Landing. He is also well known as a teacher of private
art classes. At the moment the works of his students are on display in the art
gallery at Pacific Lutheran University.
I didn’t count, but the six students in the show must have
close to, if not more than, 100 paintings in oil on paper, plus 15-20 ceramic
sculptures and a group of Sumi ink paintings. Let it be known that these are
adult students and some of them have previous art experience — they’re not
exactly beginners.
The students are: Roger Cummings, Heather Grob, Jennifer
Lauer, Rose Nicholas, Sophie Stimson and Cathy Wiggins (Cummings is listed as
Roger on the announcement card but as R. Owen Cummings on gallery wall labels).
Rose Nichols |
Judging solely on the basis of the work shown by his
students, I gather that Kogan is a strong and demanding teacher in the old
European model, meaning first master the basics. And his students have
certainly done that. The works are almost interchangeable. The paintings are
all either studio nudes done with expressive brush strokes, little to no
details, and marvelous color combinations. It is the color more than anything
else that makes many of them stand out. Or landscapes reduced to bands of color
representing ground, sometimes water, a line of trees or a horizon line, and
sky. Again, it’s the color. That and the use of thin washes of color combined
with heavy impasto, here and there a single stroke standing out like a
drummer’s rim shot. The best works overall are those with the least detail. The
impact of color and the dynamic interaction of figure and ground is lost when
they try to bring out details such as facial features.
Sophie Stimpson |
The sculptures are all small figures in clay with, as in the
paintings, few if any details. They are dynamic in their baroque poses and
heavy handling of the clay, with reminders of Degas, Matisse, Giacometti, the
rare sculptures created by Willem de Kooning, and the forms if not the surface
handling of Henry Moore.
The downside is that too many of the works in this show look
too much alike. There is little individuality. It looks like every piece was
done on assignment and according to strict instructions from Kogan.
It is hard to point out specific pieces because most of them
are untitled. Nevertheless, here are a few examples:
Nicholas is showing an excellent landscape with cerulean
blue water and dark green grass.
Wiggins’ seated figure, about for-inches tall, is a nice
marriage of a Giacometti and a Henry Moore, and she has a bright pink nude on a
light blue-gray couch with a dark green background that is outstanding.
Cummings’ figures in Sumi employ an excellent back-and-forth
between positive and negative shapes, and he is showing a little reclining nude
in muted tones of gray, green and purple that is great.
I like Lauer’s little stacked landscapes on the back wall,
and I love the combination of yellow sky and purple mountings with dripping
paint in the sky in her “Sunrise Willapa Bay.”
Stimson has some nice little landscapes shown in stacked
configurations in conjunction with those by Lauer, and she has one of the
stronger ceramic sculptures.
Grob’s use of hot reds and oranges in some of her figure
paintings is fabulous. She effectively makes use of some of the heaviest
impasto paint application in her figure, “The Mystic.”
Students of Simon
Kogan, Mon.-Fri., 8 a.m. to 4 p.m., through Nov. 12, University Gallery at
Pacific Lutheran University, Ingram Hall, 121st Street and Wheeler,
Parkland.
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