The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Books  |  Dance  |  Museum And Gallery  |  Theater

Art in America

From the Old West to middle-class guys
By GREG COOK  |  June 19, 2009

090622_oldweird_main
1957: Charlie White re-creates American Graffiti — with black America walking out of the frame.

“The Old, Weird America” | DeCordova Sculpture Park + Museum, 51 Sandy Pond Rd, Lincoln | Through September 7

“Matthew Day Jackson: The Immeasurable Distance” | MIT List Visual Art Center, 20 Ames St, Cambridge | Through July 12

VIEW: Photos of "The Old, Weird America" exhibit at DeCordova 

In the beginning, there was the Old West. The legend of the Old West's cowboys and Indians, flinty pioneers and buffalo killers, sheriffs and gunslingers started with the tall tales that cowboys themselves told of their glorious exploits. Then reporters did some more embellishing. And Buffalo Bill Cody, who had been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor for his fighting during our Indian Wars, started a circus in which he hired real Native Americans to re-enact with him the battles on stage. Which in turn inspired Hollywood Westerns.

That sort of based-on-a-true-story version of our history, in which fact gets thrillingly mixed up with fiction and turns into national myth, is the focus of the DeCordova Sculpture Park + Museum exhibit "The Old, Weird America: Folk Themes in Contemporary Art," which was organized by Toby Kamps for Contemporary Arts Museum Houston.

The title is borrowed from Greil Marcus's 1997 book about Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes, an album that came out of Dylan's noodling around with traditional and original songs in 1967 while he was holed up in upstate New York recovering from a motorcycle crash. In the songs, Marcus wrote, "certain bedrock strains of American cultural language were retrieved and reinvented" as Dylan channeled the rough-and-tumble outlaw America of old folk songs, murder ballads, tramp ditties, and blues.

"Old, Weird America" assembles 18 artists who mine this vein of American history/legend, who play at being old-timey. It's a ripe subject, and it maps what may be a generational trend — most of the artists here were born in the early '70s. Matthew Day Jackson's Garden of Earthly Delights (Spiritual America) is a wall of manufactured posters that he embellished with yarn, crystal-shaped line drawings, and collaged photos. It features images of Ronald Reagan bottle-feeding a chimp (from Bedtime for Bonzo), New Hampshire's Old Man of the Mountain, Disney characters, testimony from colonial Salem's witch trials, a 19th-century Albert Bierstadt American landscape, posters for the films Sasquatch and The Evil Dead, a jackalope, an astronaut, Bob Dylan, and Hieronymus Bosch's The Garden of Earthly Delights surmounted with a photo of Tommie Smith and John Carlos raising their fists on the podium at the 1968 Summer Olympics. It's a compendium of American heroes, monsters, paranoia, myths, and dreams that summarizes the show's subjects.

Margaret Kilgallen's floor-to-ceiling paintings and shanty towers immerse visitors in a cartoony derelict Main Street USA that offers a liquor store, a motel, a tire shop, a restaurant, and a jewelry store. A giant woman brandishes a broken bottle. It's warm, charismatic, handmade art that riffs on Mexican shop signs, tramp art, and carnival banners — art about the dirt and rust that reveal the lived-in, ramshackle heart of urban America.

1  |  2  |  3  |   next >
Related: Review: Milton Glaser: To Inform and Delight, Pottery, Potter, mummies, and a 'Rare Bird', Photos: The Old, Weird America exhibit at DeCordova, More more >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Entertainment, Music, U.S. Congressional Medal of Honor Foundation,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments

ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   CHANNEL SURFING  |  November 17, 2009
    In May 1978, Providence police raided the exhibition “Private Parts” at the Electron Movers loft on North Main Street to enforce a then-new state obscenity law.
  •   NARRATIVE TRUTH  |  November 11, 2009
    For the majority of us Americans, Iraq and Afghanistan are a series of news-data points — number of Americans killed today, number of car bombs, spending tallies, estimates of civilian deaths.
  •   BIKER GANG  |  November 12, 2009
    You’re looking over the handlebars of a bike, down the narrow canyon between a pair of city buses heading right at you.
  •   WIZARDS AND MASTERPIECES  |  November 06, 2009
    At “Harry Potter: The Exhibition” at the Museum of Science, when a robed attendant places the sorting hat on a visitor’s head and soon after a door whooshes open to reveal the Hogwarts Express, you find yourself filled with the kind of giddy expectation you feel when getting your hands on a Potter book the day it’s released.
  •   GANG OF FOUR  |  November 03, 2009
    The elegantly simple shapes of Providence artist Lisa Perez’s shallow wooden wall sculptures at 5 Traverse Gallery take on charming, wobbly, bubbly forms with uneven edges, as if they were worn away by rivers.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group