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Ricky Menace drives taxis during the day and paints animal skulls at
night.
He’ll hang a goat skull on the walls of the AAA Electra Open Forum
Co-op Art Museum & Gallery in Newport Beach Sunday.
Menace and other artists will take part in “Taxi Cab Art,” an exhibit
in which the only important qualification to participate is that you
either are, or have been, a cab driver. You don’t even need a valid hack
driver’s permit.
There are three more small rules: The art can’t be burning, have an
overwhelming odor or contain living animals.
“Rules come about because people mess up,” said Richard Johnson, the
museum’s founder and curator.
Johnson, a cabdriver for West Coast Taxicab 11 years ago, has seen
disasters in the past with art incorporating the banned elements. The
exhibit is, in part, his way of paying back all the “cabbies” he knows
who are artists.
Also when Johnson drove, he said, he wished there was a place to
showcase his works.
American Taxi, based in Santa Ana, helps sponsor the gallery. Lee
Meszaros, the company’s vice president, said he has seen musicians,
painters, actors and other aspiring creative types drive cabs. They like
the job because they can make their own hours and have time for their
art, he said.
The stereotype of the cab driver who sculpts/paints/creates by night
is quite alive in American culture. This may be why, with such films as
“Night on Earth” and television series including “Taxi” and HBO-TV’s
“Taxi Cab Confessions,” cabdrivers have become the subject of various art
media.
Even the bosses are part of the tradition. Rick Schorling, owner of
American Taxi, will display his inked doodles Sunday. They’re black and
white on 8.5-inch by 11-inch pieces of paper. He draws them when he’s on
the phone and placed on hold.
“It’s not what you would call art, but Richard [Johnson] seems to
think someone might enjoy it,” Schorling said.
Johnson’s contribution to the show will be a door from his former cab
ripped off its hinges and leaning against a black-cloth wall.
The curator said he didn’t take much care about where or how to place
the door. But he accompanied it with three photos taken by Adrienne
Sudweeks, his girlfriend who was murdered three years ago. The case is
still open.
Sudweeks’ trio of photos are black and white. The one on the left
shows an anonymous woman in the backseat of Johnson’s cab. The woman,
with droopy eyes and droopy hair, is all but passed out. The middle photo
shows the same passenger looking dazed. In the one on the right, she has
passed out.
The museum/gallery was named after Sudweeks, said Johnson. Her pen
name, “Electra,” appears on the bottom of her photos. The “AAA” stands
for “any art accepted.” An added bonus is that this puts the gallery at
the top of the phone book listing.
It’s a customized museum, displaying local artists’ works that you
have to look at twice to know what you’re looking at.
One of Johnson’s pieces, titled “The Peppermint Patty Hearst Box,” is
a mixed-media diorama that incorporates a Jesus-themed night light, Vogue
magazine clippings and garbage.
Johnson said he once made a box for his mom, and she asked him why he
couldn’t just paint flowers. She wouldn’t accept the gift.
Menace, who has painted images on cow, goat and horse skulls, but not
on human ones, said people have wondered about his art form and what it
means. He simply prefers the craniums to ordinary canvasses.
“It’s actually taking a death and making it pretty,” Menace added.
FYI
* WHAT: Opening of “Taxi Cab Art”
* WHEN: 6 p.m. Sunday
* WHERE: AAA Electra Open Forum Co-op Art Museum & Gallery, 4320
Campus Drive, Suite 110, Newport Beach
* COST: $1
* CALL: (949) 833-7718
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