Jared Pankin: Carl Berg Gallery.Jared Pankin's practice combines sculptural precedents ranging from Baroque tableaux to post-Minimalist scatter with skills more commonly associated with set decorators, diorama builders, taxidermists, and Martha Stewart devotees. The results are quasi-narrative objects and installations fusing naturalism and realism (in scales shifting from the Lilliputian to the life-size) with romanticism, humor, and the decorative. This exhibition, Pankin's first solo outing in seven years and his one-man debut at Carl Berg Gallery, included seven objects that draw one in with the intimate scale of their parts and dominate with their overall size and gestalt Gestalt (gəshtält`) [Ger.,=form], school of psychology that interprets phenomena as organized wholes rather than as aggregates of distinct parts, maintaining that the whole is greater than the sum of its parts. . They harness the dynamism found in some of the artist's strongest past work while jettisoning much of the cuteness that sometimes hindered the weakest. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Pankin's new works are scaled-down fantasy landscape fragments, all sharing the title Natural, Natural, History but differentiated by subtitles such as Devil's Hand Out or Satan's Sloop (all works 2005)--exaggerations of the sorts of names bestowed on oddball natural phenomena. Imagine a cross between bonsai trees, ikebana ikebana Japanese art of flower arranging. It was introduced in Japan in the 6th century by Chinese Buddhist missionaries, who had formalized the ritual of offering flowers to the Buddha. The first school of flower arranging in Japan was founded in the early 7th century. arrangements, and Disney's California Adventure Disney's California Adventure is a theme park in Anaheim, California, adjacent to Disneyland Park and part of the larger Disneyland Resort. It opened on February 8, 2001. The park is owned and operated by The Walt Disney Company. : Each work offers a variation on Brancusian interdependence of sculpture and base, consisting of a tortured outcropping of faux rock--roughly hewn and pieced together from bits of scrap lumber--and functioning as pedestal or shelf for tiny handcrafted hand·craft n. Variant of handicraft. tr.v. hand·craft·ed, hand·craft·ing, hand·crafts To fashion or make by hand. hand·craft trees. Pankin nods overtly to the variety of sources from which he has taken lessons. In crafting, he takes cues from use-every-scrap bricoleurs, oddball woodworker-sculptors like H. C. Westermann H. C. Westermann (Horace Clifford Cliff Westermann) (11 December1922 (Los Angeles, California)-3 November1981 (Danbury, Connecticut)) was an American printmaker and sculptor whose art constituted a scathing commentary on militarism and materialism. , and model-train enthusiasts (note the palm-tree trunks carefully formed from paint and the pine bark glued to the carved trees, piece by tiny piece). In spirit, he backhandedly channels American landscape painters such as the conflicted romantic/pessimist Thomas Cole and westward-ho optimist Frederic Church. But his works really get their charge from a comprehension of dramatic space informed by the likes of Bernini and Anthony Caro and the spindly rock formations in Road Runner cartoons. Lucifer's Left Nut takes such referential jumbling to an extreme. A rock appendage appendage /ap·pen·dage/ (ah-pen´dij) a subordinate portion of a structure, or an outgrowth, such as a tail. epiploic appendages see under appendix . , looking like a scrotum scrotum: see testis. stretched to breaking point, juts out at eye level from a wall-mounted melange of wood chunks that suggests the face of a cliff. The extension droops into a bulbous mass hovering just above the floor. From the descended ball rises the spindliest of palm trees. Beelzebub's Boney Boney Backbone, meanwhile, is a geological erection, a cigarette-like minaret minaret (mĭnərĕt`), tower, used in Islamic architecture, from which the faithful are called to prayer by a muezzin. Most mosques have one or more small towers, which are usually placed at the corners. of piled boulders made from scrap wood, topped by a nearly barren conifer reminiscent of the spire atop the Chrysler Building. And in an absurdist echo of the phallic contest in which the architects of buildings like the Chrysler once competed to reach the greatest height, Pankin's quasi-natural skyscraper stands, as if on stilts This article is about the poles. For the type of bird, see stilt. For other uses, see Stilts (disambiguation). Stilts are poles, posts or pillars used to allow a person or structure to stand at a certain distance above the ground. , on a cluster of dowels. Pankin's works are impressive studies of a kind of sculptural dynamism that seems heroic even while strained and stunted. They also serve as funny and poignant (but not preachy) metaphors for the relationship we have to a nature that inspires wonder most when it doubles as a freak show. |
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