Joe Wardwell: Allston Skirt Gallery.After five years of painting on guitars and two and a half years of portraying musicians, Boston's Joe Wardwell staged his own rock/art "concert" of sorts. The artist paired his new raucous, romantic oil paintings and the elegant drawings that make up his "A Heavy History," 2006, with a handpainted electric guitar finished in gold leaf and a vintage phonograph phonograph: see record player. phonograph or record player Instrument for reproducing sounds. A phonograph record stores a copy of sound waves as a series of undulations in a wavy groove inscribed on its rotating surface by the playing his latest vinyl album, Full Length, 2006, which showcases his rasping, guttural guttural /gut·tur·al/ (gut´er-il) faucial; pertaining to the throat. gut·tur·al adj. Of or relating to the throat. guttural pertaining to the throat. voice, booming bass-playing and drumming, and boisterous guitar riffing. "A Heavy History," a series of sixty-nine small sepia-toned pencil-and-ink drawings, constitutes a graphic and painterly assembly of musical big names--from Jimi Hendrix, Black Sabbath, Tom Waits, and Blondie to Nashville Pussy and the White Stripes--that have inspired Wardwell's combination of heavy metal, garage rock, and grunge. Pinned to the wall in time-line style, their placement determined by their subjects' careers, the loosely rendered studies look like a salon of miniature posters, advertising everything from mainstream rock to obscure doom metal. The best of these images--a portrait of Tom Waits at the piano (based on an Annie Leibowitz photograph), for example--capture the icons' raunchy genius with enormous energy. Many of the characters in "A Heavy History" reappear in Wardwell's more ambitious larger paintings. The Heaviest Painting in the World, 2006, a four-foot-square oil, situates an operatic assemblage of heavy-metal musicians within an appropriation of an allegorical fresco by Tiepolo. In Wardwell's version, British rocker Lemmy plays his bass on a billowy bil·low n. 1. A large wave or swell of water. 2. A great swell, surge, or undulating mass, as of smoke or sound. v. bil·lowed, bil·low·ing, bil·lows v.intr. 1. cloud, attended by hoards of gesticulating ges·tic·u·late v. ges·tic·u·lat·ed, ges·tic·u·lat·ing, ges·tic·u·lates v.intr. To make gestures especially while speaking, as for emphasis. v.tr. To say or express by gestures. rock heroes, living and dead. The figures are painted with a lightness and a graceful rapidity akin to Chinese brush paintings, and the orange-and-red-washed sky suggests an apotheosis apotheosis (əpŏth'ēō`sĭs), the act of raising a person who has died to the rank of a god. Historically, it was most important during the later Roman Empire. . [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Occasionally, Wardwell incorporates his own handlebar-mustachioed likeness in his work, as a cherub cherub (chĕr`əb), plural cherubim, kind of angel. Cherubim were probably thought of in the ancient Middle East as composite creatures like the winged creatures of Assyria. In Jewish tradition, they are described (Ezek. hovering above an Aerosmith concert in Aeroforced, 2006, for example, or resting in the clouds among rocker chicks who have inspired his respect (and lust) in School Girl Eclipse, 2006. His fascination with the eighteenth century is also evident in the lovingly rendered sepia lithograph that he designed for his album cover. The hand-screened five-color jacket depicts a twelve-inch tondo ton·do n. pl. ton·dos also ton·di A round painting, relief, or similar work of art. [Italian, short for rotondo, round, from Latin rotundus; see rotund.] surrounded by flamelike patterns suggestive of hot-rod detailing. Within the circle is an 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. homage to Jean-Honore Fragonard's painting The Lover Crowned, 1771-72. Wardwell adheres to the lighthearted look and mood of the original but updates the attire of Fragonard's pair of lovers to T-shirts, jeans, and sneakers and litters the surrounding landscape with beer cans and a guitar while a miniskirted groupie crowns her consort with a bottle instead of a rococo laurel. Wardwell clearly feels a genuine love for the art and music that has affected him, but he keeps his nostalgia in check with a tongue-in-cheek sense of humor Noun 1. sense of humor - the trait of appreciating (and being able to express) the humorous; "she didn't appreciate my humor"; "you can't survive in the army without a sense of humor" sense of humour, humor, humour . The result isn't so heavy after all. |
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