Showing posts with label akron art museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label akron art museum. Show all posts

Saturday, May 21, 2011

MC ESCHER


Janet bought a book on MC Escher at the museum, and the drawing of hands drawing one another was in it, among so many other wonderful things.


Fusion: art and poems (Volume 1)

Saturday, January 01, 2011

on Process

Figurative painting, came first--then abstract. Now we have figurative-abstract fusion like Miles Davis’ jazz fusion –a blend of jazz and rock. There has always been figurative-abstract fusion, going back to Turner with his mature work of storms fire and vague buildings in the background. Turner was the daddy of figurative-abstract fusion painting. Probably, we next see it in Picasso’s cubism. The Dames ’d Avignon was certainly both abstract and figurative, as was all the ensuing cubist painting. After cubism, lots of artists –fauvists, German expressionists, Klee, Kandinsky -- had figuration and abstraction. All figurative painting, even the old masters, had an abstract base-- concern with color line value composition, etc. Some painters took those concerns and turned them into the subject matter and came up with entire abstract painting –first Kandinsky, with his improvisations-and later the abstract expressionists. Gorky, who painted a little before the abstract expressionists, combined subliminal imagery with lyrical color. So he was a figurative abstract fusionist. So was DeKooning, with his women’s series. Now I’m jumping ahead a few decades. I’ve been interested for the last 30 years in merging the abstract with the figurative, and I think I can finally do it. I have seen others do it-George Reuter from Akron, and others here and there. It seems to be a logical progression, on the one hand, and on the other hand, its roots have always been around. It’s nothing new- or is it?


Controlled randomness-- like in a Degas where the figures (dancers) are arranged in what seems to be a sort of randomness, but the composition is still very much controlled. There’s randomness in nature, like the trajectory of an electron being somewhat unpredictable, or the element of chance in natural selection--evolution. There is some chance in my drawings when I put white acrylic over grey chalk and charcoal and end up in a fit of pique, slashing the white with more charcoal, and finish up with a texture and a degree of dark- light that works well with the whole drawing. That moment of chance is stored as experience that will show up in future drawings, I hope.

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Prisoner's Dilemma, Reviewed

OUTWARD BOUND

“Stone walls do not a prison make, nor iron bars a cage.” *

But for mystics, the disabled and convalescent, those in enclosed orders, those dedicated to fulfilling their genius, those in jail and those who exist in a mental straitjacket, whatever the cause, there is always a conundrum:

Does the elusive Truth exist on the Inside or Outside?

Hostages like Brian Keenan, Anne Frank, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, all attested a life of the spirit and the imagination that would not and could not be limited by physical and ideological constraints.

So does narrowed focus confer a sharper and profounder vision, offering its compensations? Or is Freedom only to be found upon the exterior, in the prolix toil and muddle of human activity where opportunities for discovery abound? Even where choice is possible, aren't these states mutually exclusive?

Cheryl Snell in a new chapbook, Prisoner's Dilemma, explores this theme in situations concerning many kinds of effacement. Each short poem is offered like a remnant of woven fabric placed under the microscope so that the colours, slubs and knots and arabesques, can be appreciated. The imagery is often stark and reminiscent of Sylvia Plath, the emotion bottled which, unstoppered, pervades an air of vaguely fragrant stoicism. Where the subtext is menacing, it frets away at a blithe surface like a sliver of glass stuck in the weave. But, often, it's uncompromising, violent, in-your-face, leaving the reader with no more than the merest scintilla of hope. The images juxtaposed in Snell's phrases cleverly release new flights of meaning as, for example in Dirty Laundry:

Tumbling from the fold
of a fitted sheet – balled-up
silk, some foreign lace. Things come
and go in this house. Last night, an earring
tangled in the wrong colour hair, everything
gone bloodshot and damp.

The man's non-sequiturs circled the drain
of his stranger's ear: Let lovers go fresh and sweet
to be undone. How else to go
with a come-on like that – innocent as soap,
pink bubbles bursting like an alibi
on the verge of coming clean.

The collection as a whole hangs together with the shape and atmosphere of René Magritte's surreal painting The Empty Mask and, in miniature, I don't doubt is as accomplished. Cheryl Snell ably demonstrates that Richard Lovelace was right!*

RJC
(Rosy Cole)

Chapbook hauntingly illustrated by Janet Snell.