Showing posts with label Cary Reeder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cary Reeder. Show all posts

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Cary Reeder at Optical Project

Robert Boyd

Been a while since I wrote some art reviews. Here is a short one.

Cary Reeder
Limes, Twigs, and Digits
at Optical Project 
On view through September 4, 2016


Cary Reeder, Entangled, 2016, Acrylic goauche on board, 14 x 11 inches

Cary Reeder is known to me as a painter of houses, particularly of the disappearing Queen Anne houses and Craftsman-style bungalows of the Heights. These paintings usually feature pastel colors and hard shadows. Her new work retains the basic color scheme but is somewhat more abstract and stylized. For instance, Entangled features tree branches with high-contrast shadows (which look similar to what we've seen before from Reeder), but behind the branches is a regular pattern of hexagons and diamonds in lavender, teal, lime green, pale yellow and light blue.


Cary Reeder, In Flame, Acrylic gouache on paper, 9 x 12 inches

Most interesting to me were a group of gouaches on paper of pairs of hands. The hands are all depicted as flat areas of color with brightly contrasting linework depicting wrinkles and blood vessels. The fingernails are all painted as flat, light pastel colors. (Because Optical Project is barely climate controlled, the humidity in the gallery has caused the paper for these gouaches to curl slightly.)

I'm told that she spent several week in a friend's cabin up in New Mexico working on these. I was quite pleased to see something different from Reeder. The new work makes me realize that what I've always liked most about her work were the flat areas of color. He colors are really quite wonderful.

The show will be on view tomorrow afternoon at Optical Project--that's your last chance to see it.

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Hunting Prize Nominees

Robert Boyd

Every Year, the Hunting Art Prize is given to some lucky painter from Texas. The prize is $50,000. Needless to say, tons of folks enter. The Hunting Prize people have just sent out letters telling artists whether they have been selected to be finalists. The winner will be announced May 3 at a gala hosted by Hunting PLC, an oil and gas service company.

The prize has garnered some controversy in the past, but it has also given prizes to some excellent artists who probably really appreciated the cash! Previous winners are Francesca Fuchs (2006), Michael Tole (2007), Wendy Wagner (2008), Robin O'Neil (2009), Lane Hagood (2010), Leigh Ann Hester (2011), Michael Bise (2012) and Marshall K. Harris (2013). 

Several of the finalists this year have shared their work on Facebook. I thought the pieces looked pretty good; I suspect the judges will have a tough time deciding. Here are a few of them.


Cary Reeder, High Noon,acrylic on canvas, 30 x 38 inches

Cary Reeder's minimalist clapboard houses are always appealing to me. She recently had a great solo show at Lawndale.


Catherine Colangelo, Giant Quilt Square #10, gouache and graphite on paper, 28" x 28"

I have seen nice work by Catherine Colangelo at the late, lamented Darke Gallery. This piece looks excellent.


David Smith, Tropical Storm, Veracruz, Gulf of Mexico

David Smith's Tropical Storm, Veracruz, Gulf of Mexico is an unexpectedly 19th-century-style entry. It's refreshing to see it included.


Hannah Celeste Dean, Re-Veiled

Hannah Celeste Dean calls her work "haunting but not ghostly," but I think "ghostly" is an excellent word to describe Re-veiled.


Hogan Kimbrell, Conjure, oil on canvas, 54 x 54 inches

I've seen a couple of excellent paintings by Hogan Kimbrell at past Lawndale Big Shows. The double image here is a bit different from what I've seen before. But his subject matter--beautiful women--seems constant.


John Adelman, 61,988,ink on panel, 38 x 30 inches

John Adelman premiered these architectural process drawings at a recent show at Nicole Longnecker Gallery. I've long admired his rigorous, obsessive work.


Joseph Cohen, Proposition 360, Pigment, diamond dust, and varnish on birch 29" x 24"

You can see another piece by Joseph Cohen (quite different from Proposition 360) at the CAMH through March 23. Cohen has been one of my favorite Houston painters for a while.


Lee E. Wright, The Captain of Industry, oil and ink on prepared paper, 32 x 44

I don't really know anything about Lee E. Wright, but based on his website, he appears to be a portraitist--an honorable specialization.


Saralene Tapley, Flourish, acrylic on watercolor paper, 29 x 41 inches

I saw this piece by Saralene Tapley in last year's Big Show. I believe it's a portrait of her fellow artist, Bryan Keith Gardner.

According to various sources, there are typically between 100 and 150 finalists. Out of that crowded field there can be only one winner. Any bets on who it will be?


Thursday, August 22, 2013

Pan Recommends for the week of August 22 to August 28

Robert Boyd

Here's most of what's opening up this weekend in Houston's art scene in these last few weeks before the fall season.

THURSDAY


painting by Emilio Reato

Argentine Art in Houston curated by Andres Bardon, featuring Ladislao Kelity, Nubar Doulgerian, Sebastian D'Amen, Monica Shulman, Luis Altieri, Alejandro Parisi, Emilio Reato, Franca Barone, Maria Paula Caradonti, Alicia Chaves, Antonia Guzman and many more, at Spring Street Studios, 6 to 8 pm. I don't know much about this show but it looks interesting.



20Hertz: Bill Arning Presents "Sad Bastard Music, C'est Moi", 7:30 pm at CAMH. A lecture by CAMH director and former rocker Bill Arning on "sad bastard music," such as David Bowie, Lou Reed, Patti Smith, The Buzzcocks, Pulp, Belle and Sebastian, Xiu Xiu, and Perfume Genius. What this has to do with visual arts, I don't know but who cares? This is some of my favorite music!

FRIDAY

 
Marcelyn McNeil , Untitled (speed), 2010 , Oil on panel; 74 x 71 x 1" -- this was in the 2011 Texas Biennial

Texas Biennial Invitational : Christie Blizard, Marcelyn McNeil, Tom Orr and Brad Tucker, curated by Michael Duncan and Virginia Rutledge at Lawndale Art Center, 5 to 8:30 pm. This is a little confusing--this show isn't part of the Texas Biennial, but features four artists previously selected for the Texas Biennial. So I guess this is kind of a spin-off?


Susi Brister

Fantastic Habitat by Susi Brister at Lawndale Art Center, 5 to 8:30 pm. Some of these photos may feel like modern updates of Cousin It, but overall this looks like a very beautiful if somewhat unnerving suite of images.


Cary Reeder, Jaundiced View, 2013

Now, What Was There? by Cary Reeder at Lawndale Art Center, 5 to 8:30 pm. Cary Reeder paints beautiful, stripped-down images of the charming but endangered  bungalows in the Heights. Wouldn't it be ironic if the upper-middle-class burgers of the Heights bought them to decorate their new McMansions?


Susannah Mira's Water Tower (2012) isn't going to be in the show, but it looks really cool!

Room Divider by Susannah Mira at Lawndale Art Center, 5 to 8:30 pm. We got a tantalizing taste of Mira's work in the Big Show, and now we will see what a room-full of her geometric assemblages look like.


Picasso brand donuts from the Menil/Fiesta project

The MENIL/FIESTA Project: Ten Years of a Curious Painting Assignment At the University of Houston at Inman Gallery, 6 to 8 pm (up through August 24, so don't procrastinate!) UH Painting professors Aaron Parazette and Gael Stack have, for the last 10 years, been sending their students to the Menil and to Fiesta Mart in order to synthesize their impressions into one painting. This is a show of some of the best results of this assignment.

SATURDAY


Alex Luster's video of the Montrose rollerblade dancer

Houston Is So Hot! featuring Ivete Lucas, Tish Stringer, Bill Daniel, Chris Nelson, Alex Luster, Stephanie Saint Sanchez, Madsen Minax and more at the Aurora Picture Show, 7:30 pm. I don't know about you, but sitting in an air-conditioned movie theater is about my favorite thing to do in August.


Jonah Groeneboer, SUN / MIRRORS, video still, 2009, 22 min

THE DISLOCATED CENTER OF THE MATERIAL WORLD by Jonah Groeneboer at the Galveston Artist Residency, 6 to 9 pm (on view through October 19th). I hate it when there are simultaneous art openings in Houston and Galveston that I want to see. Tough choice! But this one, which includes video, painting, installation and a sound piece, will be up for a while while the videos are Saturday night only... So this one might have to wait until next weekend.


Share

Sunday, July 7, 2013

It's a Sickness

Robert Boyd

Collecting, that is. C.K. Chesterton once wrote that there is little that separates a collector from a miser. Collectors are not nice people. But I can't stop! Here are a few recent acquisitions.



Ron Regé, Jr. drawing, 2 1/2 x 3 inches

I already have several drawings and comics pages by Ron Regé, Jr., so this just deepens the collection a little. As some of you know, Regé designed the logo for The Great God Pan Is Dead.


Ron Regé, Jr., Skibber Bee Bye page 4, 2000, 12 x 9 inches

Skibber Bee Bye is Regé's early masterpiece, a strange and at times disturbing graphic novel.


Cary Reeder, Storybook, 2013, 9 x 7 inches

Ever since I first saw Cary Reeder's house paintings in 2011, I've loved them. This tiny gouache was part of the Diverse Work's annual Luck of the Draw event.


Nic Nicosia, DW #2, 2013, 7 x 9 inches

This is the second Nic Nicosia I have gotten at the Luck of the Draw. It is a creepy and inexplicable image, which is why I like it.


Lisa Tan, The Temptation of St. Anthony by Hieronymus Bosch Drawn From Memory, 2013, 7 x 9 inches

I had no idea who Lisa Tan was when I got this piece at Luck of the Draw. I still don't, really, but this isn't the first piece she has made about good old Bosch. 


Raymond Pettibon, The Means to an End, 2000 , lithograph, hand colored by the artist, 24 in x 18 inches, edition of 20

This piece by one of my favorite artists was purchased at a Paddle 8 auction.


Share

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Pan Recommends for the week of February 7 to February 13

Robert Boyd with Dean Liscum

It's Mardi Gras time and there will be partying. Or alternatively, you can discuss public art or go on a long walk or look at a few paintings. It's all cool.

THURSDAY

Slide Jam: Sally Frater and Kimberli Gant at the CAMH, 6:30 pm. It's usually artists who show the slides at CAMH's slide jams, but this time they've handed the projector over to curators to talk about what it is that they do.


Marcelyn McNeil, Crudely Drawn Mimic, Oil on Canvas, 58"x60", 2013

Howard Sherman: Artist's Picks featuring Michael Guidry, Geoff Hippenstiel, Marcelyn McNeil, Tudor Mitroi, Robert Ruello, Howard Sherman, and Shane Tolbert at the Alliance Gallery- Houston Arts Alliance at 5:30 pm through March 26. An artist (with an ego and an opinion and not afraid to sling either) picks other artists to exhibit.



Rebecca Hamm, Ski Hut, watercolor on paper

Toward Substance:Paintings by Rebecca Hamm and Cary Reeder at the O'Kane Gallery, 6 pm, runs through March 14. Rebecca Hamm paints dense underbrush and Cary Reeder paints Charles Sheeler-esque images of cottages--sounds like an interesting combination.

FRIDAY


One of the pieces in Judged and Juried

Judged & Juried with guest juror Alyssa Monks at East End Studio Gallery at 6 pm. Featuring work by Adrienne Wong, Anat Ronen, Angela Obenhaus, Antonio Torres, Aron Williams, Blue OneThirty, Christian Perkins, Claire Richards, Dawn Thomas McKelvy, Diane Gelman, Ellen Hart, Jonathon Lowe, Kevin Peterson, Lacey Crawford, Leslie Roades, Lisa Comperry, Mario Casas, Mark Chen, Marky Dewhirst, Maryann Lucas, Melinda Patrick, Mic McAllister, Rona Lesser, Sacha Lazarre, Saida Fagala, Sam Li, Sarah Cloutier-Houston, Spartaco Margioni, Tatiana Escallon, Tim Walker, Will Brooks. This show seems a bit overwhelming on the face of it--an East Side "Big Show". Look out Lawndale!

SATURDAY


Mac Whitney, Houston, 1982 (in Stude Park)

Public Art and Its Impact Within Houston featuring panelists Michael Guidry (University of Houston), Jimmy Castillo (Houston Arts Alliance), and Cynthia Alvarado (Midtown Management District) and moderated by Paul Middendorf at Gallery Sonja Roesch, 2pm-3pm. Where does Houston rank in terms of public art? And who green-lighted those Jaume Plensa sculptures on Alan Parkway? All will be revealed.

El Rincon Social Music Night at the Art League featuring Ryan Lee Hansson, Lisa Marie Hunter, Josiah Gabriel and Fernando Ramirez at 8 pm. This is interesting not just because of what it is but because it represents a trend I've been noticing recently in Houston--that art exhibits are having continuous related events throughout the course of the show. We saw that with STACKS at the Art League and with Radical Presence: Black Performance in Contemporary Art at CAMH, and we're seeing it now with Tony Feher: Free Fall at Diverse Works. Anyway, go to the Art League early to get warmed up, then head on over to...


Poster by Sebastian Forray

Otis Ike and The Joanna Gallery Present:MARDI GRAS - An Epiphany of Anal Beads with the World Famous CHRISTEENE!!!  at Numbers, 9 pm til 2 am. Promises to feature Human King cakes! Tranny floats! An unmarried gay Tree! Bears! Cubs! Moms! Glory Holes! Shims! Hymns! Kings! Queens! Beads! Altar boy bathroom attendants! Enron! Elrond! & A Barbara Bush invitation to move to HOUSTON!!!

SUNDAY


Carrie Schneider and Alex Tu will apparently be wearing hazmat suits on Sunday

The Human Tour with Carrie Schneider and Alex Tu, 11 am starting at Natachee's in Main. This is the first of 10 walks to be conducted by Schneider and Tu along the path of the Human Tour, an enormous art project originally created by Michael Galbreth back in 1987. The piece was a map of certain Houston streets that formed a crude outline of a human figure.


Michael Galbreth, The Human Tour, 1987

Share

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Pan Recommends for the week of August 2 through August 8



The Big Slide Show part 2 at Lawndale, Thursday, August 2, 6 pm. A bunch of artists from the Big Show stand up and awkwardly talk about their own work. Come hear Matt Adams, Caleb Churchill, Jessica Crute, Daniela Koontz, Liza Littlefield, Chad Maydwell, Tracey Meyer, Pen Morrison, Donna Perkins, Cary Reeder and Stephanie Toppin.

The Ai Weiwei documentary, Never Sorry, opens Friday, August 3rd at the Sundance Theater.  Should be awesome.

The Bridge Club performing Medium at Art Palace, Saturday, August 4, 6-8 pm. The Bridge Club killed with their performance Natural Resources at Lawndale in 2011, so we have high hopes for Medium.

Emily Sloan's Recreational Aesthetics: "Please Don't Tell My Parents" at Darke Gallery, Saturday, August 4, 2 to 4 pm. Virginia Billeaud Anderson writes, "I don’t know what it is, but Emily used the same title for the video she presented in the 2011 Big Show, in which her film character slapped a black man’s naked ass, and that outrageous work of art that made me decide it was worth being at Lawndale and tolerating the crowd and heat." Spanking? We're there!

Cornucopia Incorporated at Kallinen Contemporary, Saturday, August 4, 7-11 pm. Another overstuffed Randall Kallinen production (55 artists, at least!) down by the Ship Channel. Among the artists are Daniel Johnston, Solomon Kane, Norberto Clemente, Catfish Perez and many more!

What are you looking forward to next week? Tell us in the comments.


Share

Thursday, July 19, 2012

The Big Show 2012: Paintings

Robert Boyd

It's fairly common to be disappointed with The Big Show. Every year, we get this visual assault, a cacophony of conflicting, self-negating artistic ideas. There is too much to absorb and it is too hard for us to think of individual pieces in isolation, even though that is necessarily the way to view the show--after all, there is no theme, no idea behind the show. A bunch of people showed up with art and a no-doubt overwhelmed juror tried to whittle it down for us.

That said, this edition of The Big Show is different. The juror, Marco Antonini, was way pickier than his predecessors. There were only 69 pieces in the show. And beyond that, many of the pieces were quite small. It made the experience of viewing the exhibit a lot less overwhelming. Does this mean that the art on display didn't sometimes seem at odds with itself? No--I think that is a feature inherent in any big open-call juried show like The Big Show.

I want to look at a few of the many pieces in the show, and as I did last year, I'll try to slot them in some kind of logical structure--a structure that doesn't actually exist in the show, mind you. I just have a compulsive need to find some kind of order.

So first, painting. Painting tends to dominate The Big Show. I'm told that this is because the vast majority of artworks submitted are paintings. But this edition of The Big Show felt somewhat less dominated by paintings. Thirty percent of the works on display are paintings and several more are painting-like objects (like what would you call Patrick Renner's Sunburst, made of found painted wood?).


Norberto Clemente, 2011, The Worship, oil on canvas, 35" x 40"

When one thinks of Christian art, we think of images of those being venerated--Jesus, Mary, figures from the Old Testament, various saints, etc. Paintings of worshipers are more rare. In the history of Christain art, there have always been worries that images of Christ or other religious figures might be idolatrous. There were two periods of Iconoclasm in the early Orthodox church when such images were banned. But in medieval Europe, Christian images were part of the means of communicating the faith to a largely illiterate populous. But we live in the modern world, where literacy is common and images are ubiquitous and therefore relatively powerless (think of how a medieval peasant reacted to a mosaic of Christ compared with someone today sitting at his computer who can see hundreds of such mosaics at the click of a mouse). Or as Bob Dylan wrote, "flesh-colored Christs that glow in the dark/It’s easy to see without looking too far /That not much is really sacred" ("It's All Right, Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)"). So what's a painter to do?

Norberto Clemente's solution in The Worship seems sensible. He honors the worship itself instead of the worshiped. The worshiped is there by implication. But the ecstatic worshipers, hands raised and eyes closed (an aspect that I associate with Pentacostal worship) show the power of their religion.

It is interesting that Clemente doesn't try to depict a real space. Instead, he has created a montage of figures that overlap. This overlapping creates an implied space, but it is in no way a realistic space. (Unless you think this congregation has three giants in it, as seen in the upper right.) Where else do you see montages like this? I can think of two pop-culture sources. This type of montage composition was common on paperback book covers and comic-book covers in the 50s through the 70s. Clemente uses montage to effect a group portrait of expression of religious faith.


Stephanie Toppin, 2012, No. 87, acrylic on canvas

I can't speak about Stephanie Toppin's art without making a disclaimer--I own some of her work. A lot, actually--two paintings, a collage and several drawings. (I wish I owned her couch that Jim Petersen, Jr. has.) So objectivity is out the window. But I can say this--Toppin's work has evolved, even though she is still working in the same brightly-colored abstract idiom that she started with. No. 87 has drips and areas where colors blend and mottled. In short, the work is becoming more painterly. I think she may be looking at some abstract expressionist painters or color-field painters. When I think of painters who approach this kind of intense color, I think of people like Sam Francis or Helen Frankenthaler. But because they were working with thinned-down paint, their work has an airy softness to it that Toppin's doesn't. Toppin's paintings are dense and opaque. For someone who has been observing her work for quite a while, No. 87 represents a maturing. This work is less poster-like than her earlier work. She's working the paint in a way she didn't before. Toppin is still on a journey as a painter, and I'm interested in seeing the direction she's moving.


Cary Reeder, Three O'Clock Shadow, acrylic on canvas, 2012

Cary Reeder paints houses. There is a high level of precision in her work, as well as a degree of simplification (for instance, the shingles in Three O'Clock Shadow that are depicted as a flat grey shape). At first, I was reminded of Edward Hopper's house paintings. Of course, Hopper liked his shadows dark and rich. The sun-bleached pastels of Reeder's paintings make me think of Fairfield Porter's palette. I like compositions--angles and squared-off lines--that almost feel like a geometric abstraction. The utter lack of human beings in her work is slightly unnerving. But despite that, the feelings paintings like Three O'Clock Shadow induce are a middle class version of luxe, calme et volupté. In that way, too, Reeder's work recalls Fairfield Porter.


Hogan Kimbrell, The Lion Tamer, 2012, oil on canvas, 60" x 60"

Hogan Kimbrell had a piece in last year's show that was similar to the piece in this year's edition. Both last year's Athlete and this year's Lion Tamer feature outlined figures against a white background. But The Lion Tamer is a stranger, funnier work. A beaten-down lion, forced to wear a coxcomb which perhaps symbolizes his humiliation is ridden by a nearly naked young woman. The erotic is a big part of Kimbrell's work, as can be seen on his Tumblr. HKStash. The Lion Tamer in particular seems to be dealing with sexual dominance, but does it without resorting to the cliches of dominance. This is no painted Fifty Shades of Grey. It is simultaneously allegorical and psychological.


Kay Sarver, Room Service, 2012, oil on wood, 36" x 48"

Kay Sarver has a series of paintings called "The Unseen" in which she paints a person whom we might overlook--a lawn worker, a janitor, a busboy, etc.--in color while painting everything around them in sepia tones. Although her website doesn't specify it, I assume that Room Service is part of this series. Compared to Sarver's more folkloric work, "The Unseen" is quite restrained and is all the better for it. Room Service is beautiful and poignant. Her painting her reminds me a bit of the illustrations of Jacques Loustal--and that is high praise.

Of course, there were many other paintings in The Big Show. I can't say these five were typical because no particular type of painting was typical. These are five that caught my eye--that's all.

But as I said above, painting was not as dominant this year as usual. In the next installment of this review, I will look at an unexpected (but not unwelcome) trend in the show--craft-based work.

The Big Show, Lawndale Art Center, July 13 to August 11


Share

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Mary McCleary Selects

by Robert Boyd

Mary McLeary was chosen by The Art League as Texas Artist of the Year. That meant she got a nice retrospective exibition at the Art League, but also that she was obliged to be the jury on the 2nd annual Gambol show. There were 400 artworks submitted by Art League members, and McCleary chose 39 of them. These were displayed in the back gallery. The other works were displayed salon-style in the hallways and studios of the Art League.

So what we end up with is an interesting opportunity--we see not only the works selected, but also the works rejected. As I looked at Gambol, I was first struck by how many of the works had something in common with McCleary's own work. And that makes sense, that an artist would pick work that came from a similar place as their own. For example, McCleary does a lot of landscapes (or people in landscapes). And this show is full of landscapes.



Daniel Brents, DEPOT



Cary Reeder, Left Behind



Fran Fondren, Morning Glow

These more-or-less traditional landscapes by Fran Fondren, Cary Reeder and Daniel Brents are intriguing in part because you rarely see this kind of work at the Art League (or Lawndale or Diverse Works or CAMH). It's too old-fashioned. And that's regrettable. I find these landscapes quite beautiful and moving in a way. There is something about lone buildings, devoid of human presence (although human presence is always implied by any picture of a building). That lack of people is kind of a blankness onto which viewers can project their own stories, their own memories. That blank screen produces a nostalgia of sorts--at least it does for me. When we think of Edward Hopper, we think of his many pictures of people-less buildings and that feeling.



Nicola Mosley, Falmouth Harbor #1

While Reeder, Fondren and Brents come out of a tradition of matter-or-fact landscapes that includes Hopper and Charles Sheeler, Nicola Mosley is a bit more abstract. It reminds me a little of Richard Deibenkorn, although Mosley doesn't push the abstraction as far as Deibenkorn. But one can view this image as a place or as an arrangement of colors and textures; neither is dominant.

But another aspect of McLeary's art is that it is collaged. The collaged elements are little bits of tubular material (I'm not sure what the stuff is) that she attaches to the canvas. In fatc, I'm not sure whether it would be more appropriate to call it a mosaic or a collage. Either way, it creates a visual density. Even though there is a large image, each McCleary piece is also a collection of tiny elements. And in Gambol, there are several works that fit that description.



Patrick Turk, These Serpents Squeeze Tighter

Patrick Turk is famous for his super-dense collages of repeating fragments of images. These are intense, psychedelic images. The tension between the whole image and the elements is something I can imagine appealing to McCleary.



Fernando Ramirez, SURFIN' USA



Fernando Ramirez, SURFIN' USA detail

I liked these dense, detail-packed drawings by Fernando Ramirez. They remind me of punk artists like Gary Panter. The lack of polish is an expressive tool in such art.



Fernando Ramirez, SHIPPING

I checked out Ramirez's website and came across this statement:
Fernando Ramirez is a post-objectivity- painter, declaring his current body of work exceeds the romantic ideals, and self-involvement of traditional art making. He’s chosen to create “matter-of-fact-ness-drawings”, focused on developing an alter-world- that represents a- simulacra to our living world. 
I don't understand quite what he is getting at here. These drawings are, however, anything but matter-or-fact. In his desire to create an "alter-world," he is creating a bizarre and exotic alternative to our world. Matter-of-fact is the landscaps of Carrie Reader and Daniel Brents above. His work of world-creating reminds me more of Brian Chippendale and Mat Brinkman in both style and content. It's quite impressive.

All of the above works, as heterogeneous as they are, feel connected in my mind to McCleary's own in one way or another. I didn't feel that with Magid Salmi's pieces.



Magid Salmi, GMO Quarentine 5 and GMO Quarentine 6



Magid Salmi, GMO Quarantine 5 detail

Salmi's work is also included in a Peel Gallery show that is currently up. Obviously there is a political component--the titles refer to genetically modified organisms, in this case foods. For those who oppose such foods, one word used to describe them is "frankenfood." Food created in a lab. (This is as opposed to genetic modification through selective breeding and cross-pollination, which has been going on for at least 10,000 years, if not longer.) Our visual image of Frankenstein is Boris Karloff, with bolts coming out of his neck. Salmi has used that visual idea here, putting electronic parts on pieces of fruit. This uses the idea of a cyborg organism as a stand-in for the idea of a genetically-modified organism.

But beyond the political meaning, the work looks great. She gives it an ironic high-tech gleam. The colors are perfect, too.



Kelly Alison, The Falling Man

Kelly Alison is a fixture on the Houston art scene, having been part of Fresh Paint, the 1985 survey of Houston's painters at the MFAH.The image refers to 9-11 (the skyscrapers, the jet, the suit on the man) and perhaps particularly to a photo by Richard Drew of one of the many who jumped from the World Trade Towers to escape the fire of the burning buildings. I is loathe to call this work political (although Alison hasn't shied away from politics in her work in the past). Instead, I see it as a history painting--one of those academic genres that was the most highly esteemed in the 17th and 18th century. (Landscape, along with still-life, was one of the least esteemed genres by the Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture.) One thing that can be said about the genre of history painting is that there are certain events in history that deserve to be painted. This is, in a way, saying that these events should not be forgotten. (And, of course, doing such a painting allows a painter to put his own spin on the event. A Flemish painter would have had a highly different gloss on The Surrender of Breda than Velázquez did in his famous painting, for example.)



Raul Gonzalez, Self-Portrait

Almost equal in size to Alison's painting is this self-portrait by Raul Gonzalez. It was hung directly facing Alison's painting, creating a kind of twisted mirror image. Gonzalez appears to be standing in his studio, with the elements of his painted work behind him, including a "No Trespassing" sign. His work frequently incorporates signage as part of the composition, including using the colors of street signs as the under-painting.



Emily Sloan, Farmhouse Architectural Object I & II

Emily Sloan's two pieces are the only sculptures in the show. I don't think this shows a predilection on McCreary's part for two-dimensional works necessarily. There simply weren't all that many sculptures submitted. (This tends to be the case as well with the Big Show at Lawndale.) These pieces relate to work Sloan has done in the past, like Black and White Picket Fence and Riffle. You know what? I want to see a whole show of these twisty little fences. I like them--I like the subject and the size (about knee-level) and the curviness of them.

And what about the work McCleary didn't select? As I wandered the halls and studios of the Art League, it was obvious that a lot of the works weren't chosen because they weren't very good or very original. And that's OK--a lot of members are members to take classes and hopefully become better artists. They can't all be accomplished artists yet. But there were pieces that were quite interesting to me but that McCleary ultimately eliminated.



Curtis Gannon, Closure Grid

What Curtis Gannon has done with this collage is to take a group of comic book pages, cut holes in them, and layer them on top of one another. But what's interesting to me is that he deliberately chose pages with very conservative panel layouts. Panels are the boxes in which each picture in a comic is contained. Drawing them as squares or rectangles (paralleling the edge of the page) is considered a fairly undynamic way of arranging them. (Panels can, for example, be angled, overlapping, curvy, free-form, or even non-existent.)

For the purpose of this collage, the panels had to be square or rectangular. In each panel, he has cut a hole in the page that mimics the shape of the panel but is a little smaller. The viewer then sees overlapping rectangles, with the content of each panel mostly erased. That said, you can still see a lot of the text--this is because dialogue and narration is usually placed on the edges of a panel. This is especially true in assembly-line created super-hero comics (which are Gannon's sources), where the letterer places the words on after the artist has drawn the picture in each panel.



David Haberman, In Search of the Big Bang

McCleary may have found David Haberman's antic geometric abstraction, In Search of the Big Bang, a little too whimsical to choose. But I liked this fun piece of art.


Share