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Event
Pick of the Week Chimps
and monks
By
Jackson
Griffith
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Mark
Bryan, detail from "The Puppet Show,"
oil on canvas, 2004.
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| Bread
and Circus by Mark Bryan
and The Treasure Hunt
by Monique Passicot at Solomon
Dubnick Gallery, 2131 Northrop
Avenue, May 6 through June 5.
Second Saturday reception May
8, 6-9 p.m. |
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There
is a thin line that separates art from cartoons,
and both of them from really goofy dreams. In Bread
and Circus, a collection of paintings up this
month at the Solomon Dubnick Gallery, artist Mark
Bryan takes a big eraser to that line and makes it
disappear.
A
couple of Bryan’s oils feature a pinched, chimp-like
figure wearing a Napoleon-style hat; an observer may
or may not conclude that the figure is the current
resident of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue--which would
put these paintings in the category of political cartoons.
In one, “The Puppet Show,” the figure
is attached to marionette strings; he holds a toy
fighter jet, which is dropping bombs, aloft in one
hand, while the other hand, clutching an Army tank,
rests on a Bible. Elsewhere under the proscenium,
a factory belches smoke near a series of mushroom
clouds, an oil well belches black goo and a globe
rests with a knife jabbed into it. In another, “The
Liberator,” the figure drives a giant tank shaped
like a country church.
What
prevents these paintings from being mere cartoons
is their dreamlike weirdness. And Bryan’s other
paintings--from odd Venus figures to anthropomorphic
tornadoes to skyscrapers dragged across a plain, ancient-Egypt-style,
by thousands of slaves--continue the dreamy aura.
If you like to linger in the morning and try to recall
the images in your mind before they evaporate, chances
are you’ll like Bryan’s work.
Also
on display in the same gallery is The Treasure Hunt,
oil paintings and drawings by Monique Passicot. Her
works seem to spring from a dreamlike place similar
to Bryan’s, but they are less cartoony, more
like images coming from meditation. Indeed, some of
Passicot’s drawings depict Buddhist monks, and
she also is showing a series of scrolls inspired by
various Asian art traditions.
Both
shows are on display at Solomon Dubnick Gallery, 2131
Northrop Avenue, from May 6 through June 5, with a
Second Saturday reception on May 8.
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