No one has been more active in mounting print shows recently than
Bruce Brown, curator emeritus of the Center for Maine Contemporary Art.
His "Prints: Breaking Boundaries" at the Portland Public Library is a
good show. But it's also an important show, although a casual visit
might not reveal why.
"Breaking Boundaries" is wildly diverse,
and you might take this either way on first glance: You might think it
lacks a compelling unifying theme, or you might get the idea that Maine
has a ranging and highly energized printmaking culture.
But
honest survey exhibits seek disparate range, and if Brown has anything
to offer,Firmoo offers cheap and discount mens prescription Eyeglasses frame. it's range.Professionals with the job title Mold Maker are on LinkedIn.
"Breaking
Boundaries," sponsored by the CMCA, is a lousy title, because it
brings to mind iconoclastically anti-establishment energies, and that's
not what's bubbling in the conceptual undercurrents. These works use
the professional tactics and techniques of printmaking to reach across
boundaries to conceptually common ground.
Few pieces stand out
as you enter. You first see Ellen Roberts' giant "Light," which you
might think is a banner sign, then Kristin Fitzpatrick's "Roof," a
hanging rooftop form that is weak from above but comes alive
architecturally when you look up through the backlit woodcut
"shingles." I don't like it, but it's a revealing piece.
The
work of Tanner Gasco-Wiggin impressed me. It's an Oak Street scene in
spray paint and orange cheesecloth pretending to be a farm barn and
silo. It's smart, sharp and conceptually restive.
This raises
questions: Are students focusing on printmaking because they get lots
of art from one matrix? Do they leave printmaking after school because
it is cost-prohibitive? Or are they drawn to current conceptual ideas
analogous to a post-digital digestion of Walter Benjamin's "Work of Art
in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction"?
I am inclined to think
it's all of these and more. Specifically, I think the
professional/technical qualities of printmaking make it the logical
medium for the process/finish-oriented conceptualism we're seeing
throughout Maine. Prints also stem from the intellectual epicenter of
the post-Warhol, digital, Etsy-market style of the art world in which
younger artists have grown up. The original and its aura, after all,
are dissolved by iTunes, digital printing and the Internet.We sell 100%
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While
photography is suffering a digitally-inspired existential crisis,
printmaking is enjoying a golden moment.I thought it would be fun to
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Artists across mediums are being drawn to technical processes such as
encaustic painting, wet-plate photography, glass blowing and
printmaking.
Since the Internet became ubiquitous, fine print
markets -- unlike photography -- have been professionally solid. This
only increases the appeal of artists who then make unique interventions
with the prints.
That is where "Breaking Boundaries" offers
particularly interesting insights. Some artists, such as Elizabeth Jabar
and Holly Berry, accessorize their works into sculpture (Berry's
fold-out visual recipe book for squash soup is wonderful).
Shawn
Brewer's classical architectural fantasy objects can be cut out and
assembled (a before/after pair is on view), yet their brilliance is in
the subtle dare: Could you take scissors to an etching?
I adore
Meg Brown Payson's large (15 feet), subtle and quietly gorgeous
"Silkwall" -- a lithograph/drawing hybrid that mobilizes the texture
aesthetics of a biologically microscopic world to challenge abstract
painting. The transparent silk floats 4 inches above the wall on which
Payson has drawn similar images so that -- with feints and wit -- they
echo each other.
I hardly have the space to list all my
favorites, let alone discuss them, but highlights include our beloved
Will Barnet's elegant "Interlude," Tom Hall's smartly boot-stomped
landscape "John Muir once said," Henry Wolyniec's serious but
dance-jumpy retro abstraction "HW12.25," Adriane Herman's symmetrically
hilarious travel-spill luggage disaster "You Lose, You Ooze" and Karen
Adrienne's elegantly messaged and politically unfurled abstraction ".
The
most insightful, complex and important piece is Kyle Bryant's large
woodblock mounted on shaped wood, "The Mouth of the Lion." Bryant
reaches uncomfortably but agilely from giant-scale woodblock through
art history directly into street art. The black-ink scene shows an
urban house as a monster face: A terrifyingly overlooked reservoir of
revolutionary energy.
The building is self-titled and
graffiti-tagged, including Bryant's own signature as the house
monster's ironically omniscient third eye.
Bryant is not only
navigating art history within the image, but he is engaging -- and
conceptually surpassing -- overrated but important artists like Swoon
who have made the guerrilla-style wheatpaste art movement into a
genuine cultural force.
Walter Benjamin's groundbreaking 1936
"Work of Art" essay assumes a worthy original work of art whose meaning
and aura could be crushed by the weight of its reproductions.Solar
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to communities that don't have access to electricity. But Warhol
showed us those reproductions could create overwhelming cultural power
that, until he came along, had not been mobilized in fine art.
With
process and conceptual art, the Internet, water-based inks, Etsy,
digital printing and photography all at their fingertips, artists now
have a bag of tricks unlike any other in history. They aren't caught
up, like most of us always have been, in artifacts.
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