Impressionism and the body politic

I found myself in front of a Berthe Morisot painting in the Art Institute of Chicago last week.  It was hung next to two Renoirs.  Thus, by curatorial invitation I was inclined to compare the two painters, side-by-side, and I have to say Morisot kicked Renoir's ass.

I had several moments in the museum where I was struck by the power, quality and outright gravitas of several Impressionist painters, all of whom just happened to be women.

I think Feminism has done many great things, although I know many will disagree with me on that statement.  In my childhood it was called Women's Liberation, which I still think I like better.  It's taken decades, and it is still one step forward two steps back some days, but cultural attitudes are changing for the better, largely because of the good fight.  One thing I feel it hasn't been kind to (or especially effective with) is art theory and art history.  Looking at a Morisot or Cassatt through the lens of feminism undeniably has it purposes, but looking at them through the lens of contemporary painting, -gender blind- serves them much better to my mind.  I wanted to see this particular Morisot next to some of the lovely De Koonings in the Institute, for example.  There's so much in the power of the impasto that pre-supposes Ab Ex; namely the shared sense of immediacy in getting the paint to surface.  It made me sad that, in this museum like most others, everything is so cleanly delineated into periods and nothing gets mixed.  This just strikes me as a wrongheaded way to look at and think about art.  If you really think about it, nothing truly exists in a box. So why put art into all these little packages?

It reminded me that there's a lot of division on both sides of the socio-political aisle these days, maybe for similar reasons.  People put themselves into boxes, and don't want to mix and mingle with the different or divergent.  There's a lot of venom from both conservatives and liberals, -and oddly, it's beginning to sound eerily similar.  The vitriol against Hillary Clinton from many (though certainly not all) of Bernie's supporters often sounds as violent and intolerant as the voices of Trump's minions.  Why have reached this point in our culture where we can no longer intelligently disagree with someone without verbally abusing them or trying to intimidate them?  Why do millions of people feel that being insensitive and vulgar is somehow "telling it like it is?'  I just feel we can do better.  That we must do better.

I'm surprised that so many people on the eroding edge of lower-middle class can support a billionaire, any billionaire, really.  In no scenario does this man care about "the people," just wait and see.  But I'm equally surprised that we are having, for the first time in decades, a serious conversation about some form of socialism, because that also indicates an enormous cultural sea change.  The times they are indeed a-changing, and while half of the people in this country are going to be royally pissed on November 5th no matter how things turn out, I wonder if either outcome will truly usher in the cultural apocalypse  so many on both sides fear.  More than likely, and sadly, it will be business as usual by February 2017.

I just wonder if we can pick our national discourse out of the comment section gutter and actually speak AND listen to one another respectfully again.  I am not naive to the deep cultural and ideological divides.  I've spent most of this year reading my Burke and Paine, getting to the roots of these polarized visions for democracy.  To be honest, it's hard reading.  It's much easier and more satisfying to call someone an "idiot" and leave it there, except for the fact that I feel I owe my fellow human beings the same grace I've been extended all the times in my life when I too was simply uninformed and unfoundedly opinionated.  We all have much to learn about one another and about our shared history.

So maybe the museum is a place to start.  Maybe if we mix the Monets in with the Pollocks and let ourselves free-associate for a while from a place of unfamiliarity and non-judgment we can open our collective perceptions.  Maybe what you don't like isn't crap, maybe you just don't like it because you've never thought about it, or perhaps never seen in from a different perspective.  When we cling to the safe and familiar we tend to become more frightened, not more free.  Freedom comes with letting go and stepping into the unknown.  Fear is the expressway to tyranny.


Out



When the going gets tough, go on vacation; in my case, a semi-perminent one.  The only downside of traveling is leaving the studio, paintings in various states of being.  It's been a long Spring, lots of uncertainty and an ever-present state of limbo.  These liminal spaces of life, they seem protracted whilst inhabiting them but all-too-brief in retrospection.  The truth is that I've need a vacation for a long time.  Sometimes we act, sometimes we are acted upon.  

I leave the studio and go out into the world to experience, and to share experience.  The Rico Act will return in about a week.

  

See me at #Artisphere2016

Coldwell Banker Caine Main Street Gallery, exhibition view

Greenville South Carolina's international art festival, Artisphere is getting ready to happen in just a few weeks, May 13-15.  I plan to be down at the Coldwell Banker Caine Main Street gallery throughout the weekend to answer questions about the work and meet people.  Come say hi.

Artisphere© has become a BFD for Greenville over the past few years.  Attendance appears to be growing, and this year the number of visitors may well creep into six figures.  It's a great time of year to visit SC, the temperatures can still be moderate (relatively speaking) and the city is in bloom.

Though not officially part of the festival, my exhibit at CBC gallery runs through this month and next, and the location (428 S Main Street) is highly visible.  Look for the glass blowers on the Reedy River bridge, and the gallery is right there.

Thanks to all who came out for the opening reception last month.  All of the work is for sale and Teresa Roche at Art & Light gallery has agreed to handle all sales on my behalf.  Because May is Mental Health Awareness month, I am going to give a percentage of all sales this month to the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation, a non-profit charity that "is committed to alleviating the suffering caused by mental illness by awarding grants that will lead to advances and breakthroughs in scientific research."

Metal health issues increasingly touch our society, as seen all-too-often in the cases of mass shooters, military veterans who return from service with PTSD and other mental/emotional issues, and the family members who suffer along with those individuals with disorders and illness.  As an artist, this is a very personal issue for me and I wanted to do something.

Hope to see you at Artisphere!