Conor Mcgrady: NFA Space/Chicago Cultural Center. (Chicago).In his recent large-scale paintings, Conor McGrady at once mines the tradition of full-length portraiture and turns it on its head. Mimicking the compositional style of official commissioned paintings by artists from Giovanni Battista Moroni Giovanni Battista Moroni (c. 1520/24[1] – February 5, 1578) was an Italian painter of the mannerist period. He is also called Giambattista Moroni. to Thomas Sully, McGrady locates the personality and power of his subjects as much in their dress and posture as in their facial expressions. In such images the body and its politics become virtual mirrors of each other. But McGrady's figures express a very different politics from that of the kings and generals that were his predecessors' subjects: They range from street toughs to white supremacist skinheads and members of various paramilitary organizations. McGrady's show at NFA NFA - Finite State Machine included five large portraits and a group of six smaller works that focus on the scowling faces of hoods. The artist has selected his disaffected and somewhat surly models based on their commitment to violence in the name of one political creed or another. The degree to which that path is emblazoned on their bodies--from hobnailed hob·nail n. A short nail with a thick head used to protect the soles of shoes or boots. [hob1, peg, projection (obsolete) + nail. boots to stem shaved heads, across all the coded adornment in between (tattoos, militaristic garb, symbolic T-shirt insignias)--makes these men excellent candidates for highly rhetorical portraiture. Despite their aggressive posture and challenging stares at the viewer, they exude ex·ude v. To ooze or pass gradually out of a body structure or tissue. an easy sense of certitude cer·ti·tude n. 1. The state of being certain; complete assurance; confidence. 2. Sureness of occurrence or result; inevitability. 3. that is surprisingly peaceful. McGrady's subject is not so much the idiosyncrasies of a given political climate as it is the construction of the self through emblems of power and authority. The artist, who lives and works in Chicago, is originally from Northern Ireland, and one senses his understanding of the appeal of violent individual political involvemen t when the social battles are inherited. His familiarity with the hyperarticulated physical trappings of extremist ideology is also clear: He knows, for instance, that the greenish khakis, black boots, L-O-V-E tattoo across four knuckles, and short black jacket with a Celtic cross on one sleeve clearly identify the subject of New Youth, 2001, as a foot soldier in the Troubles to those who would encounter him on his own turf. Less subtle, perhaps, is the sledgehammer on which he insouciantly leans; while his expression is unconcerned, he looks as ready to wield his weapon as was some grim-faced eighteenth-century colonel with his halberd halberd Weapon consisting of an ax blade and a sharp spike mounted on the end of a long staff. Usually about 5–6 ft (1.5–2 m) long, it was an important weapon in middle Europe in the 15th and early 16th centuries. in a Joshua Reynolds painting. Several of McGrady's paintings show pairs of figures formally posed. The skinheads of Front, 2002, stand side by side, one casually holding a long wooden lance while his comrade reaches to touch his arm. An alert black doberman stands behind these men, another hint of violence barely suppressed. Here McGrady also implies the collegiality, even a certain clannish clan·nish adj. 1. Of, relating to, or characteristic of a clan. 2. Inclined to cling together as a group and exclude outsiders. clan homoeroticism homoeroticism /ho·mo·erot·i·cism/ (ho?mo-e-rot´i-sizm) sexual feeling directed toward a member of the same sex.homoerot´ic , that often accompanies active political commitment. At the Cultural Center McGrady showed nearly three dozen smallish drawings (some akin to these were included in the 2002 Whitney Biennial in New York). Spare and wan, these cursory watercolors and charcoal drawings depict objects or fragments of a location that might otherwise seem benign but here are eerily imbued with a residue of violence. A small nonchalant non·cha·lant adj. Seeming to be coolly unconcerned or indifferent. See Synonyms at cool. [French, from Old French, present participle of nonchaloir, to be unconcerned : non-, blotch of reddish brown at the edge of a schoolyard is enough to suggest a bloodstain blood·stain n. A stain caused by blood. tr.v. blood·stained, blood·stain·ing, blood·stains To stain with blood. [V., back-formation from bloodstained. , evidence of some almost washed-away violence to a child. Tools and pieces of bric-a-brac, drawn in McGrady's clean black lines and isolated on the white paper, look like the most sinister of weapons. The grinding omnipresence of this kind of unexpected but total alienation is McGrady's ultimate subject, manifested in terms of both person and place. |
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