My current favourite artist is Joe Fowler. He seems to be genuinely creative and I
really like the way he works across media. Joe does video, paints, sculpts and builds a pretty mean
crate. I am in line to buy one of
his paintings but nobody has told me how much the one I want costs…yet.
Joe's most recent exhibition is called Object Says. When I asked him about the title Fowler
explained that is what a pun on "Simon says" – the kids' game. It is on now in the Annex Gallery at
Eastern Edge Gallery and it's worth a peek. The show consists of three sculptural objects: a kind of
piano, a wall installation and a smoke detector. The game Fowler appears to be
playing with the viewer is: the
artist makes object and the viewer supplies the story.
The sculptures all have functional references with a
domestic theme. My only real
reservation about the success of Fowler's show was around this domesticity that
I don't think gets expressed sufficiently. On his website Fowler says this is a show in evolution so in
the future I look forward to seeing how he resolves this weakness.
If I could buy something from this show it would be the
piano piece. Joe told me that he
grew up in a house with "too many pianos". I like his reference to the major and minor keys in black and
white and how he replaced the ivory keys with light switches in the appropriate
colours. I tried to play a simple
melody on the sculptural keyboard and was delighted to find out it really
worked. And thank you Joe for not
killing any elephants in the process of making art.
I own a piece of jewelry made out of elephant tusk. I nearly donated it to an art auction
but when I showed the piece to an appraiser he simply said "they aren't going to
get what it's worth. Just keep it
Gloria." So I did. The pendant is of a Buddha. Ironically, when Joe and I were talking he mentioned ivory Buddha's and what they could possibly mean in different
cultural contexts. That reminds
me, when I asked Joe about the influences on his art he mentioned Daniel
Miller, the anthropologist. I
thought this was very insightful.
Personally, I have found anthropology very useful in understanding art and I discuss that in my chapter in The Culture of Craft.
One last thing: the role of mystery in Joe's show. I have been observing object makers in
St. John's and they seem to come down to two schools. Those who reveal and those who conceal. Take a sculptor like Michael Waterman;
he's from the reveal school. Joe
Fowler comes from the conceal school.
Waterman likes to show you the guts of his objects, their inner workings
and Joe likes to hide them and make you wonder.
Joe Fowler might turn out to be one of this province's best
sculptors/painters/video guys. I
will watch his career with interest.
No comments:
Post a Comment