Gary Panter: Dunn and Brown Contemporary.Gary Panter is probably best known as the chief production designer for the cult '80s TV show Pee-wee's Playhouse. But to a different group of fans, he's a major artist of the punk second generation of underground comics. His weird, free-associative graphic narratives have been published in books and magazines ranging from the influential comics journal RAW to Riddim A riddim is a rhythm pattern consisting basically of a drum pattern and a prominent bassline. This Patois or Jamaican-English term originates from the English word "rhythm. , a Japanese reggae fanzine in which the artist's captions go untranslated (why bother, since they make little sense anyway?). [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Panter's recent show at Dunn and Brown Contemporary Dunn and Brown Contemporary is a commercial art gallery located on 5020 Tracy Street Dallas, Texas that shows emerging to established artists. It was founded in 1999 by Talley Dunn and Nancy Brown. included acrylic paintings on canvas, works on paper, and one recently published book. His full-scale art is derived primarily from pages in his numerous sketchbooks, which he enlarges and sometimes colors but otherwise hardly edits. This process results in spontaneous-looking compositions with the feel of something an adolescent Joey Ramone might have painted, had he been familiar with the concept of a postmodern palimpsest palimpsest (păl`ĭmpsĕst'): see manuscript. . Scenes from antique Disney animations rub up against allusions to Ed "Big Daddy" Roth and R. Crumb in a slapdash slap·dash adj. Hasty and careless, as in execution: slapdash work. adv. In a reckless haphazard manner. mix that, while inelegant in·el·e·gant adj. Lacking refinement or polish; not elegant. in·el e·gant·ly adv. , is entirely Panter's own. Elegant resolution isn't even a consideration in works like Tubby, 2004, in which scrawled black lines describe vague, stylized styl·ize tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es 1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style. 2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize. faces, bricks, and clouds. Beneath these are similar but conflicting images rendered in red and beneath those, casual patterns of pastel color. This layering technique, which generates simultaneously constructive and destructive interference patterns, is a constant motif for Panter. A painting titled Clog Area, 2003, is typical: It features a loosely daubed daub v. daubed, daub·ing, daubs v.tr. 1. To cover or smear with a soft adhesive substance such as plaster, grease, or mud. 2. To apply paint to (a surface) with hasty or crude strokes. grid of plastic-toy colors superimposed on its left side by cartoonlike bird heads spouting blank speech balloons and populated on its right by goofy bear heads, trees, and model-train tracks. Between these two arrays, a field of bars and dots form the eponymous clog. Panter's book, Jimbo in Purgatory (Fantagraphics, 2004) provides a helpful, if ironically didactic, context for his deliberately gauche and perplexing per·plex tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es 1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle. 2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate. paintings. It retells Dante's Purgatorio in the form of a graphic novel, substituting Jimbo, a loin-cloth-clad character who has appeared in Panter's comics since the mid '70s, for the original protagonist. Here, the contemporary vernacular of the comic book--common chatter as opposed to formal, academic discourse--evokes Dante's own use of everyday language. The book is crammed with pop-cultural references, too: Boy George shows up, as does Yul Brynner's gunfighting robot from Westworld (1973), and Elvis appears in the role of the king. Each page offers extensive footnotes, citing sources ranging from Ben Jonson to Alice Cooper, Voltaire to a friend of the artist's from rural east Texas. But since the footnotes are unnumbered, any mapping of reference to the text is difficult. Consistent with Panter's projects in general, Jimbo in Purgatory is a riot of voices, in which diverse systems of belief and representation are playfully juxtaposed jux·ta·pose tr.v. jux·ta·posed, jux·ta·pos·ing, jux·ta·pos·es To place side by side, especially for comparison or contrast. . Gleefully crude in its celebration of its thousand-thread web of conceptual and visual influences, the body of Panter's work is uncomfortably suggestive of the notes made by a particularly manic graduate student's long-suffering psychiatrist. |
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