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Cannon spotlights four artists in juried exhibit
BILL FARK - For the North County Times
In the five years since its opening, the William D. Cannon
Art Gallery has featured the work of numerous local artists. This concentration
reaches its peak with the current presentation of the 2004 Cannon Art
Gallery Invitational.
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Torero's "La Sufrida" on the
cover of North County Times, December 8, 2004 issue. |
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Gallery coordinator Karen McGuire said the show evolved from the
annual juried exhibitions that have shown works by thousands
of local artists. "These
shows were lively, eclectic presentations that included the work
of a large number of artists working in a wide variety of styles
and media. But, however talented, each artist would
have one or two pieces on display ---- four at the most. Enough to
whet the appetite of viewers perhaps, but not quite enough to get
a full appreciation of an artist's work," McGuire said.
So the gallery's exhibition strategy changed. The annual juried
exhibition became a biennial (every other year), with an invitational
exhibit presented in the alternating years. For the invitational
show this month, McGuire selected four artists ---- Yoshimi Hayashi,
Christine Oatman, Mario Torero and Marcela Villasenor ---- who
were chosen from the 31 who participated in the 2003 biennial.
The four artists represent the great variety of art in San Diego County.
Hayashi is a sculptor who creates art from mundane materials. Oatman's
art is in assemblages, miniature environments inspired by memories and
created from found objects. Torero's paintings are socially motivated.
Villasenor uses a contemporary form, digital photography, to unite past
and present.
The first piece on view in the exhibit is Torero's acrylic-on-canvas "La Sufrida," which
sets the mood for the section of the gallery devoted to the artist.
The subject is a woman of majestic mien, surrounded by figures,
both mythic and real, from a pre-Hispanic past.
Another strong work is "No Corras Vuela (The Sendoff)," in which an American
Indian male (Aztec/Mayan or Incan) contemplates a figure representing the past.
The demonic expressions on both the man and the figurine give the painting
a supernatural look. Nearby hangs a digital print of a mural Torero painted
in Chicano Park in San Diego. "Heroes" is a composite work memorializing figures
from the past from Benito Juarez to Mother Teresa to Dr. Martin Luther King
Jr. "El Christo Che" beatifies the popular revolutionary Che
Guevara.
Torero also makes contemporary political statements. "Mescalito (The Border)" and "Maquiladoro
(Love Conquers Hate)" notes the love-hate relationship between Mexico and the
United States. "Quetzacoatl (The Indian Renaissance)" is a restatement
in belief of the mythical land of Aztlan.
Marcela Villasenor also links past and present. Her images, most of them
created by manipulating digital photos, recall a type of pre-Hispanic sculpture,
chacmool. Chacmool, carved in stone, is a reclining human figure lying
on its back, face turned toward the viewer. Once considered to be an independent
deity, the chacmool is now believed to be a part of sacrificial rituals.
Villasenor surrounds the figure with symbols of pre-Hispanic culture,
primarily maize. Her subject is her mature daughter, representing the
present, in various native activities from childbirth to physical labor. "Semillas de Sangre #3" was
created by printing discs with an inked sponge in the form of a cross. "Untitled
#1," another cross form, combines text, miniature photo prints
and painting.
Yoshimi Hayashi's art reflects his "interest in the beauty of the ordinary,
the mundane." This is evident in his choice of material and in
how he creates art.
Of the 13 Hayashi pieces in the exhibition, the majority are
on paper. But not ordinary paper; four were executed on napkins.
Hayashi also incorporates script on most of his pieces. "Gaze," "Peel" and "Forward" have precisely spaced
lines of writing in Japanese on napkins. "Measure of You" is
a round section of a world map centered on the Arctic Circle
covered with lines and lines of written text.
This devotion to writing extends to other materials as well. "Places for Space,
Space for Space" is executed on a narrow strip of chalkboard
approximately 5 feet long. Another piece is a vertical strip
of chalkboard with text in chalk.
Hayashi does not confine himself to a single medium. "Waingoro" was created
by dripping ink on rolls of paper, some suspended from the ceiling, others
attached to a fixed post. "Glance," along with "Forever/Never to Find You," "So
Damn Gorgeous" and "Perch of Stone, Cord of Wood" are cast aluminum. "Offer
You My Heaven" is a lithograph, and "Out of My Way" is a ceramic
teapot. The artist is also represented by a video.
Christine Oatman's assemblages represent her reactions to found
objects, as well as what she has read and experienced. On a nonfunctional
screen door that separates the assemblages from the rest of the
gallery is a quote from Emily Dickinson, "Nature is a haunted house, but art a house that tries to be haunted." By
accepting this dichotomy, the viewer can enjoy the six pieces
of art.
Dickinson is also the subject of an assemblage. The central focus
of "Emily" is
a skull resting atop two volumes by the reclusive New England poet: "Letters
of Emily Dickinson" and "The Complete Poems of Emily Dickinson."
Oatman said the teeming life inside the skull contradicts the stereotyped
symbol of death. Dew drops glisten on grass: golden fingers hold a human
eye. And a butterfly held by a golden female figure soars into the sky.
A magnifying glass serves two purposes. It enables viewers to examine the
contents of the skull; it also represents the science that informs Dickinson's
verses.
"Desert Hymnal" is a tribute to a distant relative of the artist. While traveling
to California in 1851, Olive Oatman and her younger sister Mary
Ann were captured and enslaved by Yavapais and Mohave Indians. Mary Ann died
of starvation, but Olive was rescued and married a New York banker, with whom
she lived a quiet life.
An image of Olive is shown on the mirrored lid of a 19th-century canister
that contains the assemblage. Inside is a miniature desert diorama that
includes a prickly ocotillo branch with a book of inspirational verses
caught on its thorns. A hummingbird, a tiny horned lizard and an arrowhead
complete the environment.
"Seed Box" links William Wordsworth's poem "Ode on Intimations of Immortality" and
Burpee's brand seeds. The linking theme is growth. Props representing
growth ---- a watering can and rake ---- are shown with a scythe, the symbol
of death.
Objects in "Vanity Box" represent the Realm of the Senses. The image
on the mirror, a section of the 15th-century French unicorn tapestries,
represents Sight. Representations of the other senses are in
the drawers. New grass invites Touch. Salt is Taste. Perfume bottles
represent Smell, and a recording provides Sound.
"Elephant Stand: The Material Realm" gets its name from the central object, a
red-painted stool on which an elephant stood during circus performances.
In the assemblage, a toy pachyderm occupies the stand, along with other
miniature figures and objects associated with the circus: trunks, a program and
a half-empty beer bottle. Oatman identifies poet William Carlos Williams
as the philosophical touchstone for the piece.
A sewing basket from the 1950s is the metaphor for "Nest." Sewing-related objects
reflect the optimism of the period: "Happy Home" rustproof needles and "Success" brand
snap fasteners. Complementing the scene are an ironing board
and portable sewing stand and a copy of The Workbasket magazine.
This is the William D. Cannon Gallery's first invitational. Next
year, the gallery sponsors a juried biennial, followed in 2006 by
another invitational. Artists wishing to enter the 2005 biennial
should contact the gallery at (760) 602-2021 to request a "Call for Entries" brochure.
original story at North County Times website
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