I had a chance to visit the Fresh Air Juried Exhibition of new artists many from the northwest. I enjoyed the new media and had my brain tricked from afar with two of the 3-D artworks. The paintings with oil were well done as a whole composition.
One has the appearance of pop art. It was fairly large (the first painting one views upon entering the gallery) more than a couple feet wide and the height was about the same. The composition had a meaning of the American flag and tiny animated characters one similar to Looney Tunes and the other similar to 1940s war posters. I liked the artist use of skewing the stripes in quarter section one going vertically and the other going horizontally. The characters of course like other pop arts from the past have a meaning. For me, it seemed to represent the large part of American society fascination of commercial objects rather than important things like their children and the other war. One character placed on the top right was a blue bird like Tweety dropping a bomb. The other was a mother appearing to be texting in her iPod ignoring her son’s excitement.
The other painting is found in the art department website called Remedy. It was organic and had the appearance of the inside of the human body with arteries and hearts. I liked the artist use of a light pink nylon? added to the composition. Its transparent material and holes gave the layout more attention.
The other painting was a mix of oil and acrylic with a thick texture. I can’t recall the name, but it had a meaning of inferno or a word relatable. It had an impressionist appearance with the blurry subject of whole bridge ablaze. It’s fascinating walking to it from a distance. It’s more realistic like a picture. I like his use of perspective by placing the bridge in an angle. It made it appear large and reaching far into the distance. I also liked the flaming bridge in a night setting. The negative space has a meaning by bringing all the focus to the bridge. I also think its difficult trying to add smoke in a night setting. It reminds me of James Whistler painting Falling Rocket with his use of fire in the night and his use of blue and gray colors other than black.
The 3-D pieces were very interesting. One seemed to be an ordinary pillow in glass case. It looked very realistic with its form and how it lay upright in the glass case but like an illusion it was only ceramic with a thick plain blue or pink glaze. It looked soft and plain like an old pillow. The other was fascinating because it was fairly large wooden blocks made to look like a ceramic with shiny glossy finish like glass. There was four blocks each with its own relief, but one stood out from the rest. The last one l enjoyed because it was carved out from the top to appear like a whirlpool. It was an enjoyable visit to the gallery and I was very interested in grabbing some of the pieces to feel its texture, alas not today.
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