• Still Smouldering – Harriet Zinnes

    Date posted: June 9, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Still Smouldering

    Harriet Zinnes

    Image
    The Fire Under the Ashes: from
    Picasso to Basquiat focuses
    on Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988), Gaston Chaissac (1910-1964), Jean Dubuffet
    (1901-1985), and Joaquin Torres-Garcia (1874-1949). The works were shown
    earlier in the year at the gallery’s booth at the Basel Art Fair, and their
    figures and forms have been largely drawn from tribal art, “art brut,” street
    art and graffiti. Jan Krugier, the gallery owner, comments that the
    “underlying primitivism [which he likens to shamanism] in each work makes the
    exhibition a visceral viewing experience,” and adds appropriately that “there
    is a very beautiful expression that sums up the role that shamans play …. If you
    are looking for fire� you will find it beneath the ashes. Shamans find fire
    beneath our ashes. They rediscover our truth and transmit it to us. It is a
    message that has to be delivered� that is absolutely vital­­ – because
    without that fire� we are nothing.”

    So it is in the works
    of Jean-Michel Basquiat, who so quickly became an art world star with his
    childlike drawings and scribblings, and died of an overdose by the age of
    twenty five. Gaston Chaissac, the French artist was connected to the Art
    Brut group as can
    be seen in his work from India ink and brush on brown kraft paper here. Jean
    Dubuffet also uses India ink in his collage on paper. Perhaps because Joaquin
    Torres-Garcia makes use of geometric and figurative abstraction with grids and
    symbols drawn from ancient and modern cultures emphazing somehow man’s
    relationship to the cosmos, there is an immediate excitement to the work. This
    is a show that requires contemplation of man’s strange relation to a mysterious
    universe. Surrounded by the glowing pictures, it is hard to think of the
    recent broadcasts of “Chinook Down” as art turns terror into solace, even as
    the terror is never left behind. The fine catalogue assists that contemplation.

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