James Drake: Rhona Hoffman Gallery.Like a latter-day Bernini lost in the deserts of the American Southwest, James Drake, in his recent work, explores the stark and savage milieu of West Texas while assembling a romanticized allegorical overview of his life and oeuvre, treating both with an effusive period sensibility. Selected from his series "City of Tells," 2001-(shown earlier in 2005 at SITE Santa Fe, in the city where Drake now lives and works), this video and sequence of large charcoal drawings are reminiscent of the Italian high Baroque in their extraordinary lushness. Drake uses charcoal in a broad and almost painterly manner, luxuriating in bravura sweeps of the medium in drawings that reach up to fifteen feet across. Somewhere between chiaroscuro chiaroscuro (kyärōsk `rō) [Ital.,=light and dark], term once applied to an early method of printing woodcuts from several blocks and also to works in black and white or monotone. and grisaille grisaille (grĭzī`, –zāl`, Fr. grēzä`yə), a monochrome painting and drawing technique executed in tones of gray. , his technique is both highly skillful and intensely dramatic. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] One group of these drawings is from a project Drake has been working on since 2001. In an isolated rural area of West Texas (the artist was born in Lubbock and has lived near El Paso), he arranges extraordinarily ornate outdoor feasts on a long banquet table groaning under the weight of an orgy of food, flowers, candelabra, and wine glasses. Then, after setting up video cameras a safe distance away, he leaves the dinners to their just desserts. Sometimes, feral hogs appear and climb atop and, in a display of concentrated gluttony Gluttony See also Greed. Belch, Sir Toby gluttonous and lascivious fop. [Br. Lit.: Twelfth Night] Biggers, Jack one of the best known “feeders” of eighteenth-century England. [Br. Hist. , make short work of the veneer of civilization represented by the careful setting. High-end culture meets wild nature, the hogs suggesting an allegory of greed and excess. For the large drawing City of Tells, with Signs Following, 2002-2004, and in one of the three scenarios shown simultaneously on the video City of Tells, 2001-2004, Drake introduces an eighteen-foot Burmese python into this set-up and shifts it indoors. The serpent slithers through the banquet, disrupting the glassware but ignoring the prepared food. In the video, however, it deliberately encircles a live rooster rooster its crowing at dawn heralds each new day. [Western Folklore: Leach, 329] See : Dawn rooster symbol of maleness. [Folklore: Binder, 85] See : Virility that seems frozen in terror, and the footage ends at the moment the predator appears poised to strike. This sense of the accoutrements ac·cou·ter·ment or ac·cou·tre·ment n. 1. An accessory item of equipment or dress. Often used in the plural. 2. Military equipment other than uniforms and weapons. Often used in the plural. 3. of luxury and surfeit meeting the instinctual processes of nature becomes anthropomorphic Having the characteristics of a human being. For example, an anthropomorphic robot has a head, arms and legs. on both counts, a strange combination of desire, impulse, and fear that both illustrates and undercuts the adage "all animals eat, but only humans dine." Similarly ebullient impulses surface in the other group of drawings that make up "City of Tells," Drake's evocative memories and fantasies playing out alongside art-historical homages. He uses old family photographs, including snapshots of himself as a young soldier and images of relatives and friends, as source material. In the monumental thirty-two-by-twelve-foot drawing City of Tells, 2002-2004, not exhibited here but referenced in multiple studies and sketches, these backward glances share space with Drake's interpolation interpolation In mathematics, estimation of a value between two known data points. A simple example is calculating the mean (see mean, median, and mode) of two population counts made 10 years apart to estimate the population in the fifth year. of artists from the past, through his charcoal portraits of Raphael, Delacroix, Velazquez, Goya, and others. His frieze of casually connected groups of figures, among them images of contemporary colleagues such as Bruce Nauman, Lynda Benglis, John Torreano, and Sherrie Levine, flows left to right in a long stream, its diverse members commingling Combining things into one body. The term commingling is most often applied to funds or assets. When a fiduciary, a person entrusted with the management of funds other than his or her own in trust, mixes trust money with that of others, the fiduciary is commingling in a wry meditation on intellectual and personal influence. Like much of Drake's work, it has the allusive al·lu·sive adj. Containing or characterized by indirect references: an allusive speech. al·lu and rhetorical drama of an apotheosis, of a traditional supranarrative strategy made modern and personal. A "tell" may be defined as a mannerism mannerism, a style in art and architecture (c.1520–1600), originating in Italy as a reaction against the equilibrium of form and proportions characteristic of the High Renaissance. through which one inadvertently reveals private attitudes and feelings, but in leaving such subtleties behind, Drake has created instead something more agitated and pertinent. |
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