Detail from a work on paper by Erika Somogyi at Monya Rowe Gallery in New York. Somogyi's drawings depict people in ambiguous rural or exurban spaces having Carlos Castaneda-like transcendent moments, merging into the landscape and etherscape, as denoted by vivid whorls and slashes of DayGlo paint. I'm sure they are not using drugs. I've mused before on the perennial return of a hippie aesthetic and the differences between the ultra-ironic use of DayGlo by Peter Halley and Kenny Scharf in the '80s and its rather more committed use by Somogyi and others. Her work is driven, without the complete obliviousness to history usually marked by this kind of project. Further pondering will have to be done on how it escapes self-consciousness but also avoids the better-known outsider cliches.
holy shit!
That's great, it kinda reminds me of Pablo Amaringo's work, but more like street people tripping than shamans tripping...
warriormagazine.org/pablo.html
www.pabloamaringo.com/painting4.html
Interesting. Our friend Skinny, who is sometimes around these parts, has a large collection of Amaringo paintings. They are really beautiful. Especially in person.
Oooh, I bet they are!
|
Detail from a work on paper by Erika Somogyi at Monya Rowe Gallery in New York. Somogyi's drawings depict people in ambiguous rural or exurban spaces having Carlos Castaneda-like transcendent moments, merging into the landscape and etherscape, as denoted by vivid whorls and slashes of DayGlo paint. I'm sure they are not using drugs. I've mused before on the perennial return of a hippie aesthetic and the differences between the ultra-ironic use of DayGlo by Peter Halley and Kenny Scharf in the '80s and its rather more committed use by Somogyi and others. Her work is driven, without the complete obliviousness to history usually marked by this kind of project. Further pondering will have to be done on how it escapes self-consciousness but also avoids the better-known outsider cliches.
- tom moody 1-06-2006 10:51 pm
holy shit!
- paul (guest) 1-07-2006 1:06 am
That's great, it kinda reminds me of Pablo Amaringo's work, but more like street people tripping than shamans tripping...
warriormagazine.org/pablo.html
www.pabloamaringo.com/painting4.html
- Thor Johnson (guest) 1-08-2006 7:42 pm
Interesting. Our friend Skinny, who is sometimes around these parts, has a large collection of Amaringo paintings. They are really beautiful. Especially in person.
- jim 1-08-2006 8:29 pm
Oooh, I bet they are!
- Thor Johnson (guest) 1-08-2006 9:10 pm