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A diverse
collection of artworks provides a new assessment of the subject of
religion and spirituality in art. Curator Ron Steen has assembled a
wide-ranging group of twenty-five artists for their contributions
referencing concepts of faith and religious symbology. While the
subject of religious practice and dogma is actually foregrounded, the
exhibit, titled “The S-word: The State of ‘Spirituality’ in
Contemporary Art,” is also visually engaging. In a curatorial essay Steen grapples with gathering the different artworks under one thematic umbrella. It’s a problematic undertaking, however, and Steen was well-advised to put the word “Spirituality” in quotes when titling the exhibit. How, after all, does an artist reference the intangible, the immaterial, something which is ultimately invisible? Religion itself is not spirituality, nor are the artifacts and symbols of religious practice. By depicting devices and texts of such practice, an artist may be only tangentially addressing spirituality, and might actually, in fact, be subverting or satirizing religious belief. A thin gray line encircles the eye of the beholder, separating mortal error from transcendence. The signature work for the exhibit, a 1989 20 x 24 inch oil-on-linen titled “Still Life with Grape Juice and Sandwiches (Xenia)” by David Ligare is a luminous realist work that depicts a glass pitcher filled with juice beside a stack of white bread sandwiches on a small cut-away stage or altar by a body of water visible only at the right edge of the image. It‘s a deftly updated commentary on the eucharist, the body and blood of Christ, and the rendering conveys a presence, even a reverence, that is surprising. Painted with that southern light that filled Salvador Dali’s painting of “The Last Supper,” it also recalls Dali’s stereoscopic paintings depicting Christ on the cross. |
![]() David Ligare, "Still Life with Grape Juice and Sandwiches (Xenia)," 1989, oil on linen, 20 x 24". ![]() Betye Saar, “Riddle of Reality,” 1975, wooden box assemblage, 10 3/4 x 7 1/4 x 4 1/4”. ![]() Lyn Aldritch, "Primary View #1 (Faith)," 1989, cardboard carton/transparent sealing tape, plexiglas, 48 x 15 x 10". |
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The idea of
the sacred text is explored in prints, books and assemblages by Betye
Saar, Mark Ryden, Sandow Birk, Raymond Pettibon and Ed Ruscha.
Executed with artisanal precision, these works are mostly tangential
to spirituality. Saar’s work, however, conveys a presence that is
authoritative. There, is after all, the letter as well as the spirit of
the law, one frequently opposed to the other in dramatic
contradistinction. A small watercolor by Wes Christensen quietly contemporizes the Passover ritual of washing a doorway with lamb’s blood as protection against God’s plagues. This work, with its casual air and contemporary feel, exemplifies the letter of spiritual law enacted as a necessary act of survival. |
![]() Bari Kumar, "33," 2005, oil on canvas, 12 x 22". ![]() Laura Lasworth, “St. Thomas & Mr. Eco,” 1993-94, oil on two shapes panels, diptych, 78 x 33” each. ![]() Kim Dingle, "My Struggles with Jesus," 1995, mixed media, 31 1/2 x 50 1/2 x 24 1/4". |
More deeply
philosophical, numinous paintings by Bari Kumar, Aaron Smith and Jon
Swihart look and feel contemporary, yet invoke an invisible world in which
a living presence seems about to reveal itself. Their works, along
with a dramatically lit realistic painting by F. Scott Hess titled “The
Myth of Creation,” most embody real spirituality. Fraught with a
portentous atmosphere, seemingly charged with meaning, these artists
dispense with the subject of religious practice and plumb the subject of
spirituality through visual enigmas. Ray Zone; " The S-Word: The State of 'Spirituality' in Contemporary Art", |