
Living
in a Dreamworld
Gods
and lock-boxes at DIVA
BY
CHUCK ADAMS
I don't usually read comment cards at gallery exhibits,
but in this case I wanted to be sure my personal taste wasn't way
off the mark. Yep, "Very magical. This is the most inspiring room
[in the gallery]" pretty much sums up what I feel about R. Schofield's
photography show, "The Silence of Light," on display at DIVA. Magical,
sensual, extraordinary, lush and, oh, most definitely full of life,
Schofield takes the underwater photography and studio portraiture
genres and collapses them onto each other in a wonderful, playful
series of god and goddess portraits.
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| The
Deep Sleep by Jennifer Salzman |
Shot in lakes and rivers throughout Oregon, the
finished prints were all captured using natural light in what appear
to be quite lush underwater environments, full of freshwater algae
casting many of the photos in green aquatic hues. Last Labyrinth
peeks through a river-sculpted spiral rock formation with a figure
relaxing in a fetal position at the end. The birth canal metaphor
is not lost on the artist; detritus floats in the frame like the
many skin cells in a placenta.
I could hear the muted underwater world —
the relative silence compared to the striking light — in the
exquisitely captured air bubbles on the mossy rocks in Did Reason
Sleep? Schofield allows the foreground elements (detritus, plant
matter, algae) to get between the camera and the subject, making
the vegetarian elements as important as the meat ones.
Schofield heavily references the academic painters
of the late 19th century, especially the work of William Adolphe
Bouguereau, whose art has been described as "photo-idealist" for
his photorealistic oil paintings of nude female bathers. But the
Bouguereau work that instantly sprang to mind while viewing Schofield's
show was Nymphs and Satyr, which depicts a gaggle of nude
nymphs who have captured a spying satyr and are playfully attempting
to pull him into the water with them.
The Yearning for Truth is perhaps the closest
correlation to Nymphs because it is the most narrative-driven
photo. In Yearning, two females recline in seductive poses
— one has her hand placed mischievously near her genitals
— while a nearby male shakes his fist in frustration at the
simultaneous invitation and denial (these are sexless gods, after
all). Sex, birth, rebirth, fear, desire, contemplation: Schofield's
exhibit is one small story told large over a series of panels, similar
to religious altars, and it is a show you must see.
Also on display over two of DIVA's galleries are
the sculptural work of Andreas Salzman and the black-and-white photography
of Jennifer Salzman (partners for more than 20 years) in a show
titled "perspectives." Perhaps as a result of the stunning photography
I'd witnessed earlier, I was more drawn to Andreas' sculptures in
this show. These are not lightweight works.
Andreas Salzman's harrowing Hope Chest #4
opens up to reveal a small pool of hand-molded female figurines
in exaggerated faces of agony, as if each is in a deep sleep nightmare.
The message here is feminist and/or familial, depending on whether
you see children or adult females in the chest, and speaks of women's
(and mother's) hopes, dreams and nightmares unrealized.
Andreas has a fascination with body shapes, both
simulated and real. While Vessel juxtaposes the pliability
of long strips of wood with the curvature found along the spine,
opening up the possibility of a common shape, Spine Box locks
a human backside inside a pinebox coffin as if to ask, "Where is
your metaphorical spine when you need it in these troubling times?"
and answers "Oh yeah, it's safe and secure in a box."
Also check out Jennifer Salzman's familial portraits
of her mother and daughters, particularly, natch, the four-in-a-series
My Mother, My Daughter, which depict the artist's mother
and daughter walking and dancing together in a wooded setting. The
images are double-exposed to give the figures ghost-like appearances
and to further reveal the hand of the artist. Jennifer herself is
the missing link in the photos, but she bridges this gap with her
art, the proverbial stand-in double.
"The Silence of Light" and "perspectives" continue
through Dec. 22. See blogs.eugeneweekly.com
for more pictures and context for the show.
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