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Joe Forkan Displays An Old World Despair At Raw Gallery
By Margaret Regan
FRESH FROM A European sojourn, painter Joe Forkan is exhibiting
a new body of work with distinctly Old World proclivities.
Forkan, a local illustrator who frequently contributes to the
Tucson Weekly and other publications, has delved into the
grand old art of oil painting. It's not often on the contemporary
scene that we see the old-fashioned technique Forkan displays
in the brooding works in his one-person show at Raw Gallery. Like
an old-time painter, he methodically layers his oils, making each
layer transparent enough to allow the underlying colors to shine
through. He scratches and gouges with abandon in the fluent paint.
And then he varnishes the whole to a high shine.
But these dark paintings owe more than technique to the latter-day
Europeans. Endowed by their gloomily luminous colors with an undercurrent
of emotionalism, they're full of a sense of decay, of the kind
of cosmopolitan despair captured by the German Expressionists
in the dissipated days of Weimar. In "The Dance," for
instance, two couples take a turn on a bile-green floor, their
deep-green shadows suggesting the confines of the claustrophobic
dance hall. The solid figures of the couples, two men and a hetero
pair, are built up by various strokes of color: white, yellow,
flesh, orange. Their facial features are indistinguishable, brightly
lit though they are by harsh artificial lights. There's no sense
of joy enlivening these anonymous party-goers. Rather, they're
enveloped by a sense of foreboding; they dance, so to speak, while
waiting for Rome to burn. In "The Bastard," two meaty
figures emerge ominously from a deep bruise-colored background,
again relying on flashes of light to distinguish themselves from
the shadows.
No less melancholy--but perhaps more American--are some paintings
based on old photographs. Though the pictures Forkan uses are
not from his own family, they still resonate with the heartbreak
of past time. "Relics of Misremembrance" is a finely
painted triptych that dissects the tricks played by memory. In
the central panel, a little girl is standing on a sidewalk. Outfitted
in a cloche hat, dress, Mary Janes and anklets, she's clearly
a child of the '20s or '30s. He's painted the street scene in
the pretty sentimental pinks and yellows of memory. But in the
panel to the right, the little girl's already started to dissolve,
and at left, in a blank panel of deep green, she doesn't exist
at all. Likewise, "Reunion" is a photo-inspired painting
of a group of men, dressed in the optimistic overcoats and jaunty
felt business hats of the '40s and '50s. They pose manfully in
some anonymous public space. The painting is a kind of Hopperesque
take on the aching sadness of modern life. It records a generation
that is waning fast, just as their figures are fading into the
deep grays of Forkan's background.
More confrontational is "Lost Ground," another dark
image that pictures a panic-stricken figure in full flight. He's
running headlong toward the viewer, fleeing out of one of those
classic receding-perspective backgrounds, made up of a series
of telephone poles and railway cars disappearing diagonally into
the vanishing point. It's a deliberately murky but evocative painting
of fright. Likewise, "Misremembrances #1," one of a
series of deft monoprints, conjures up primal despair. Like Munch's
famous screamer, the isolated figure in this one is all alone
in an ominously undulating landscape. The roiling clouds and fields
echo the figure's rollicking emotions.
Over at Dinnerware Gallery, Michael Chittock's bright mixed-media
paintings look downright cheerful by comparison. Instead of the
Forkan palette of bruise maroon, olive and gray, Chittock paints
his figurative works in cheerful oranges and rusts, complemented
by vivid royal blues, or in mesmerizing blends of gold, maize
and ochre. And Chittock takes a wholly opposing approach to his
materials: He builds up his paints to the third dimension with
sawdust and wax, and he turns them into collages by gluing in
all manner of found objects, from porno newspapers to painted
teddy bears.
But that doesn't mean that his subjects are not serious. Building
his pictures around portraits of people in his life, the painter
makes metamorphical narratives on some of the grand themes. In
"A Father's Passage," a dead father floats serenely
in a lovely golden sky, while on the earth below a young woman
sits in a benevolent landscape of rusty orange. She's young and
nubile, still fully a part of life, and there's no grief to be
found in her face. But she's wearing a real-life wristwatch, and
it's ticking away: her time will come. The somewhat heavy-handed
symbolism of the watch notwithstanding, the work is a fine contemplation
on death.
Another, "Heaven's Gate," is a harmonious narrative
about birth. (Like several others in this show, it was seen earlier
this year in a small group exhibition at M. Revak & Co.) In
it, a dreamy woman, heavily pregnant, curves her pale yellow flesh
in sleep. Below her are images of the fertile earth--painted postcards
of mountains against the sky, fish-like creatures among some reeds--and
behind her are flat planes of orange and black. It's a fine composition
at once organic and geometric, figurative and abstract.
Joe Forkan: New Paintings and Monoprints continues
through November 22 at Raw Gallery, 43 S. Sixth Ave. Gallery hours
are 1 to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, with extended hours
until 7 p.m. on Thursdays, and from 7 to 10 p.m. on Downtown Saturday
Nights. For more information call 882-6927.
Chittock: Paintings continues through November
22 at Dinnerware Gallery, 135 E. Congress St. Gallery hours are
noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday, with extended hours until
7 p.m on Thursdays, and from 7 to 10 p.m. on Downtown Saturday
Nights. For more information call 792-4503.
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