Gardenshapes —
artwork by Kathleen
July
28, 2012
“Beauty
should be shared, for it enhances our joys.
To
explore its mystery is to venture towards the sublime.”
―Joseph
Cornell
I hesitate to
use a sports term to begin this review, but, since the Summer Olympics opened
last night, I’ll set my disinclination aside to state emphatically that artist
Kathleen O’Brien is at the top of her game!
Gardenshapes —an
exhibition of her mixed media collage finishing its run in the main gallery of
Danville’s Community Arts Center— has ample proof to support my claim. I made
one more return visit yesterday to experience the diverse subtleties of her
singular creations.
Inspired by
birds and flowers, and exploring the garden as a metaphor, this collection of
artwork represents everything that has captivated me for years about Kathleen’s
approach. These works have clearly grown out of how she thoughtfully observes
and attunes with nature. They also literally contain and preserve natural
ingredients. But in contrast to collage that maintains its focus on formal or
intellectual juxtapositions, Kathleen’s art always nudges one toward a deeper
sense of wholeness and the inner complexity of our balanced existence as both
organic and spiritual beings. Without question, she has made a personal
commitment to creating art as a mystical practice, and, on a communal level, to
providing nature-inspired beauty as a source of healing in a fractured world.
With the
strong presence of these intangible dimensions, Kathleen’s art is always
esoteric, and yet she manages to make the work accessible to all with her
choice of subject matter and allegiance to traditional drawing. At the same
time, she can delight the eye of a fellow artist with her methodology,
aesthetic choices, and pictorial skill. I’m not ashamed to admit that much of
Kathleen’s symbolic virtuosity is beyond my ken, but I appreciate that it’s all
in play at the intuitive level. Being near the prolific output of her creative
life is simply uplifting, and that’s because all the facets of her art —whether
conscious or subliminal— unify as a total perception to nourish the mind,
heart, and soul.
Getting back
to the show, I was initially struck by the five largest pieces (28 x 36
inches), beautifully presented against white in deep gallery-style frames of
natural wood. This “look” is familiar to those who know Kathleen’s art, and
enhances the work’s identity as an unique artifact, preserved behind glass,
like a rare botanical or zoological specimen. They are titled with reference to
the garden theme. In contrast, a separate piece (24 x 30 inches) is presented
with its surface exposed in the manner of an easel painting. It looks equally
at home, released from behind the glass, expertly varnished in a way that does
not distract. Its name is Heaven
& Earth, Yin & Yang, Dark & Light, Birds & Trees, Flowers &
Bees. My eyebrows lifted as I began to read the lengthy title, but
was pleased with the closing rhyme as I finished. This artist always has a
quiet surprise in store. Each of the large works is visually distinctive, but
very much a cohesive part of a series unified by her long dedication to
compositional abstraction, to a consistent theory of color, and to diligent
mark making.
The large
piece titled Garden
for Queen Anne’s Lace is marked by a cellular pattern resembling
microscopic tissue, which, while remaining highly abstract, transforms itself
into a flower garden, with an interesting emphasis on each “drop of Queen’s
blood” that, when closely examined, becomes a dance of circles, squares, and
triangles —a dynamic that exemplifies Kathleen’s knack for taking the
observer/participant through layers of meaning. The design also incorporates
the application of illustrated postage stamps. Kathleen is never far removed
from a devotion to cultural references and ephemera, and her Joseph Cornell
influences are ever present. A fine example of this are four pieces dedicated
to bird-species (16 x 20 inches) that combine found printed patterns with her
typical labor of liquid media. Nests are created with random shards and
colorful scraps. Dried and painted star-like blossoms effectively merge the
organic, symbolic, and celestial. In Kathleen’s collage there are many allusions
to language, both literal and archetypal, and here we discover many fragments
of the printed word, as well as her “trademark” calligraphy. I was particularly
drawn to Garden for
Blue Grosbeaks, a strong arrangement of symmetrical and
asymmetrical elements that carries out more of her evident investigation into
fundamental shapes —circle, square, and triangle. These compositions are
anything but static, a characteristic of Kathleen’s art built on a myriad of
ways in which she provokes eye movement by simulating the dynamic patterns of
nature, often with the application of actual plants and minerals. A perfect
case in point is 9
Bird Eggs (30 x 30 inches), with its nimble use of botanicals most
artists would overlook as raw material, through which she creates a variety of
rhythms within a formal, 3x3 grid structure.
I should
mention that Kathleen’s control of what I call “implied viewing distance” is
masterful. Enjoying her watercolor effects and hidden treasures up close is
inevitably a satisfying experience, as is true with much of current small-scale
mixed media collage, but her pieces also can be savored at a distance. I found
myself continually studying a work from across the room and then, taking off my
eye-wear, sticking my nose near the glass to examine fine detail. Whether from
this point of view or from half a block away, Kathleen’s distinctive impression
is always recognizable, an enviable accomplishment for any artist. For example,
both Royal Lily
Garden and Staple
Garden contain brushwork that only can be achieved by someone who
is continuously handling liquid on a tool and is fully at ease with her
surface. On the other hand, she uses this micro-fluency to create the intended
multi-layered depth of her macro-composition, and yet I was constantly invited
to step back into the intimacy of the picture plane, much as one feels when
standing back to admire a flower garden, while being compelled to converge at
hand’s length, only to spy a miniature surprise —a dutiful pollinator or tiny
feat of nature’s diversity within repetition.
With my
fixation on the bigger paintings, it was too easy to neglect the smaller items,
so I had to instruct myself to visually isolate and appreciate several other
works. Two of these were within squares, and each have treatments not as
pronounced elsewhere in the exhibition. Feathers
uses paper itself as a dimensional medium, and The Blessing of Rain features a darker
atmospheric background —a shimmering chalk texture that makes me wish Kathleen
would more intensively explore the potential of pastel effects. In addition,
there are three bird portraits (9 x 12 inches), with coatings of what appeared
to be beeswax, which recall for me the investigations of 19th-century
naturalists. My favorite is Garden
for Eastern Bluebirds, with its deft pencil work and luscious color
palette. Kathleen pushes her highly capable layering beyond technique to create
a sense of time distortion, an interplay of wildlife and cultural antiquity
that makes certain the work is much more than a lovely rendering of birds.
Throughout this outstanding show are many such allusions to natural and
human-made cycles that fuse the worlds of growing things and a striving race
that has always responded with symbolic culture to seek a balanced place in the
scheme of life.
Indeed,
Kathleen O’Brien has found her place. With a home studio close to nature, and a
creative passion that distills her observations and meditations through heart,
head, and hand, she is a gold-medal artist of the soul.
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