Telling American stories through art
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Young Chang
Consider it a picture-book exhibit about perfect strangers who might
also be your ancestors.
A Japanese man in kimono-like garb flails frantically in a canoe while
trying to net a bottle from beneath the Santa Monica pier. His long black
hair streaks the sky on a windy night.
A girl dreams of her fears with a snake coiling toward her. A hangnail
moon floats overhead and an incomprehensible yellow zigzag cracks a
navy-blue sky.
An artist paints above ground while there are caskets underground.
Just what is the story being told and who are the characters?
Aptly titled “American Stories,” the collection of 22 prints curated
by Sarah Vure features the works of artists including Dolores
Guerrero-Cruz, Lari Pittman, Joe Bastida Rodriguez and Andy Warhol.
Subjects like gender and identity, violence in America, the American
dream, cross-cultural ism and the African-American story make up the
chapters of this picture anthology being exhibited at the Orange County
Museum of Art through July 1. The posters cover the 1960s through ‘90s.
“I was interested in art that could be provocative, that could
communicate, that could draw from significant social issues,” Vure said.
“It’s about art’s ability to communicate and the different ways that
artists can tell a narrative.”
The mediums include serigraphs, lithographs, photographs and
watercolors. The pieces hark back to the print revival of the ‘60s, when
artists responded to political movements and protests through art.
Masani Teraoka’s “Santa Monica Pier,” a watercolor piece on paper of
the man lunging for litter, falls under the umbrella of cross-cultural
ism but makes a statement about environmentalism and pollution, Vure
said. The style combines the popular Western theme of pop-art and the
Japanese technique of woodblock print.
An untitled work by Guerrero-Cruz shows a young flower girl in a white
ruffled dress and an older bride who has a skeleton face and lots of bare
teeth. She wears a wedding dress and both females are holding flower
bouquets. This piece is about young women who get married in hopes of
finding their identity, the artist said. The skull represents the state a
woman enters when she depends on marriage to help herself get happy.
“It’s like a slow death,” Guerrero-Cruz said. “You realize you need to
be happy with who you are before you can do anything.”
Another work, titled “This Landscape, Beloved & Despised, Continues
Regardless,” shows six caskets with silhouetted figures lying in them and
an artist dressed in 19th century attire painting at an easel on top.
This piece by Lari Pittman says something about identity.
“It’s about how although all humans are destined to die, art will
transcend human existence,” Vure said. “It’s a painting about painting,
the idealism that the artist feels.”
Warhol’s “Electric Chair,” a pink serigraph with yellow blurs and a
speckled outline of a chair, is open to interpretation.
“Warhol was one of the least political artists in this exhibition,”
Vure said. “He abhorred violence yet he did a series of works based on
crashes, electric chairs . . . and yet he claimed he was apolitical and
indifferent to the issues.”
The pastels of the serigraph mix well and exude a calm, almost
pleasant feeling. Vure said the colors create a distance from the
violence of the image.
“And sort of warns us almost of how we can be indifferent to violence
when we’re over bombarded with images, as we are,” she said.
Joe Bastida Rodriguez’ “Night Fall As I Lay Dreaming” offers a
different kind of warning -- that of losing one’s cultural heritage. The
girl dreaming about snakes and other worries symbolizes this fear.
“All of the work is really quite powerful and each one conveys its
message in a very strong way,” Vure said.
FYI
WHAT: American Stories: From the Personal to the Political
WHEN: Through July 1. 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Sunday
WHERE: Orange County Museum of Art, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport
Beach
COST: $5 for adults, $4 for seniors and students, free for children
under 16 and museum members
CALL: (949) 759-1122
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