Ivan Morley: Patrick Painter. (Los Angeles).Ivan Morley's paintings are inspired by the frontiersman's lore of scrappy, dried-out California towns with names like San Gabriel San Gabriel (săn gā`brēəl), city (1990 pop. 37,120), Los Angeles co., SW Calif.; inc. 1913. Fabric, furniture, paper products, tools, and aircraft parts are manufactured. , El Monte El Monte (ĕl mŏn`tē), city (1990 pop. 106,209), Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1912. A residential, industrial, and commercial city in the San Gabriel Valley, El Monte manufactures furniture, electronic equipment, semiconductors, , and Tehachapi. Such locales and their all-but-forgotten (and possibly artist-fabricated) histories--if you can call tales of memorable cockfights and observations on the behavior of squirrels histories-seem unlikely sources of inspiration. Yet, from a mass of myth, a dose of his own vivid imagination, and a range of raw material, Morley has created some mighty idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies 1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group. 2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity. 3. pictures. The show as a whole was pulled together with a keen sense of detail, with texts telling a few of the stories rendered carefully on the walls. To create his paintings, Morley applies dyed fabric, wax, varnish, dense patches of colored thread, and, occasionally, oil paint to a range of supports that includes denim, glass, linen, and canvas. Sometimes he paints on glass, peels the image off, and affixes it to another support. The textures and varying opacities of these surfaces contribute to the work's material diversity; we get blocky quiltlike patterns, floral motifs, and faux-naif, cartoonish illustrations on tie-dyed grounds. Slipped into the mix are some Indonesian-style batiks, which Morley says he learned about from LA stoner ston·er n. 1. One that stones. 2. Slang a. One who is habitually intoxicated by alcohol or drugs. b. One who is a delinquent or failure. culture. The cryptic and funny Souvenir, 2002, shows three malevolent-looking squirrels dancing on a tombstone Tombstone, city (1990 pop. 1,220), Cochise co., SE Ariz.; inc. 1881. With its pleasant climate and legendary past, Tombstone is a well-known tourist attraction. The city became a national historic landmark in 1962. that reads SAN GABRIEL MISSION. From its accompanying text we learn that, way back when, "The squirrels only come out for funerals, of which there are a lot... some spirits passing into the great unknown bourne Bourne, town (1990 pop. 16,064), Barnstable co., SE Mass., crossed by Cape Cod Canal; settled 1627, inc. 1884. Bourne Bridge (1935), across the canal, made the town an entry point to Cape Cod and a resort and commercial center. , they sing this tune." Another text: "Bullets only hit one side of anything here because, no matter which way they're fired in, they always fly east with the wind." Tehachepi (sic), 2002, Morley's pictorial vision of this mock-Indian saying, shows the trunk and branches of a tree punctured with bullet holes and interspersed with woundlike floral shapes signaled by arrows. The works don't always require stories, nor is there any real need for a link from one to the other. Pieces such as All of the Groups So Far Combined, 2002, a torrent of fishlike embroidered em·broi·der v. em·broi·dered, em·broi·der·ing, em·broi·ders v.tr. 1. To ornament with needlework: embroider a pillow cover. 2. shapes on a brown linen field, and A True Tale, 2000-2002, made up of squares of thread in bright hues of tomato, tangerine tangerine: see orange. tangerine Small, thin-skinned variety of the mandarin orange species (Citrus reticulata deliciosa) of the rue family (citrus family). , and sky blue, are freewheeling free·wheel·ing adj. 1. a. Free of restraints or rules in organization, methods, or procedure. b. Heedless of consequences; carefree. 2. Relating to or equipped with a free wheel. and buoyant in their near-abstraction. Delicate flowers cover the surface of one of several works titled El Monte (this one from 1002), resulting in a hybrid of decorative textile and magic landscape. Aphorisms like "Pattern and sewing make literal passing time" and "O repetition, help me invest in the singular" are one route into Morley's paintings--or, as he calls them, "poetic myth objects." Hinting at the impulses behind his own artistic practice, the mantras also read like gentle instructions from the artist to himself to hold fast to his particular path via repetition and a quirky material integrity. Each work, a marker of real time and action, is a story in its own right, recording a sense of contemporary conditions as well as fluidly delineating a past. |
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