Printer Friendly
The Free Library
4,723,737 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Paul Laffoley: Kent Gallery.


Though the art world has long prided itself on its tolerance for 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.
 cosmologies, there are still true believers out there whose single-mindedness outstrips even the forbearance of the avant-garde. For such artists, there typically awaits a lifetime of professional disappointment relieved only, if ever, by an official designation as an "outsider," that class of cultural identity that transforms the very pathologies that originally barred its members' assimilation by the mainstream into valorizing affirmations of their visionary singularity.

Paul Laffoley presents an intriguing case study in this trajectory. His many official and unofficial biographies brim with all the requisite qualities of the polymathic pol·y·math  
n.
A person of great or varied learning.



[Greek polumath
 isolate, and then some--diagnosed as a child with mild autism (later defined as Asperger's syndrome), he reportedly underwent eight shock treatments immediately after college; he lived and worked in the same utility room in a downtown Boston office building for over thirty-five years; and he claims that a 1992 CAT scan revealed a shard of metal lodged in his brain, an intrusion he has come to believe is an extraterrestrial implant motivating his artistic work. Yet despite a resume direct from central casting, he's shown his paintings in hundreds of solo and group exhibitions, not just in the gilded cage of "outsider art," but also in many mainstream venues, including his longtime New York gallery, Kent, which recently mounted a thematic selection of some five decades' worth of his paintings.

Trained in art history, philosophy, and classics at Brown University, Laffoley embarked on a career that early on was marked by great promise and repeated failure. He was booted out of Harvard's Graduate School of Design and found his way to New York in the early 1960s, and there he began to work with visionary designer and architect Frederick Kiesler, who also eventually sent him packing. He worked on the architectural team that designed the World Trade Center, before being fired from that job, too, reportedly for advocating that bridges be constructed between the two towers. Defeated by the larger world, Laffoley retreated to Boston and began painting in earnest.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The recent show included eighteen works, dating from the late 1960s through 2006, and Laffoley's signature style--often suggesting a wild admixture of Edward Tufte, Mark Tansey, and A. G. Rizzoli--has been nothing if not consistent. From the very first, his canvases (estimated to now number more than three hundred) have been animated by a fascination with esoterica esoterica Medtalk A synonym for 'oddballs'–unusual causes of common complaints. See Anecdotal, Fascunomia. , an overwhelming logorrheic intensity, and a vivid sense of horror vacui. Conceived as self-contained multimedia presentations on different subjects--from the kabbalah kabbalah or cabala (both: kăb`ələ) [Heb.,=reception], esoteric system of interpretation of the Scriptures based upon a tradition claimed to have been handed down orally from Abraham.  (The Metatron, 1977) to the relationship between Lucretius and quantum theory (De Rerum Natura [The Nature of Things], 1985), from gnosticism (Pistis Sophia, 2004-06) to the theories of Wilhelm Reich (The Orgone or·gone  
n.
A universal life force hypothesized by Wilhelm Reich, supposed to emanate from all organic material that purportedly can be captured with a boothlike device and used to restore psychological well-being.
 Motor, 1981)--the paintings are packed with painstakingly rendered images, cascading patterns of text that seem to contain roughly equal parts accurate religio-scientific information and obscurantist ob·scur·ant·ism  
n.
1. The principles or practice of obscurants.

2. A policy of withholding information from the public.

3.
a.
 hogwash hog·wash  
n.
1. Worthless, false, or ridiculous speech or writing; nonsense.

2. Garbage fed to hogs; swill.


hogwash
Noun

Informal nonsense

Noun 1.
, and dizzying "engineering" diagrams, all set within improbably complicated compositional schemes.

Laffoley's works tell a psychedelic tale full of compelling sound and fury, but what exactly do they signify? For all their frequent opacity of meaning, the paintings do manage to impart a message of informational consilience Con`sil´i`ence

n. 1. Act of concurring; coincidence; concurrence.
The consilience of inductions takes place when one class of facts coincides with an induction obtained from another different class.
- Whewell.
 that is remarkably in line with cutting-edge science. And unpacking the kernels of genuine scholarship embedded in these crazed matrices will lead viewers on rewarding journeys through often fascinating historical marginalia mar·gi·na·li·a  
pl.n.
Notes in the margin or margins of a book.



[New Latin, neuter pl. of Medieval Latin margin
. Located somewhere between sense and nonsense, between the realm of genius and the province of the crackpot crack·pot  
n.
An eccentric person, especially one with bizarre ideas.

adj.
Foolish; harebrained: a crackpot notion.
, Laffoley's work poses tantalizing tan·ta·lize  
tr.v. tan·ta·lized, tan·ta·liz·ing, tan·ta·liz·es
To excite (another) by exposing something desirable while keeping it out of reach.
 questions about the line separating brilliance from bushwa--questions whose pertinence for contemporary art is by no means confined to the sphere of the outsider.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Author:Kastner, Jeffrey
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Mar 1, 2007
Words:605
Previous Article:Brent Green: Bellwether.(animated films exhibition)
Next Article:Portia Munson: P.P.O.W.(art exhibition)
Topics:



Related Articles
Hot summer sales.(acquisition of art works from Paul Petro Gallery in Toronto, Ontario)(Brief Article)
Beatles become the bond.(Entertainment)(Father and son musicians share the irresistible Fab Four)
ART NOTES.(Arts & Literature)
ART NOTES.(Arts & Literature)
Swig Equities launches the exchange at 25 Board Street: art gallery-like production in Downtown's FiDi neighborhood.
Marie Alvina Roy, 1918-2007.(DEATHS)
Bid!
The Local: Matzo-Gate and the Rise of Ridgewood
Former New Statesman editor to lead gallery trust
Modern-day pilgrim opts for chocs instead of Chaucer

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles