“Sausage clouds” were the first words out of my mouth—to the apparent
dismay of the artist whose drawing I was looking at. I couldn’t help
myself. That’s what they look like. Which is unsurprising given that I
was in the world’s wurst capital—home of bratwurst, bierwurst,
bockwurst, blutwurst, and braunschweiger, to mention only the Bs—and
given that I had had two of the five mentioned above for lunch, plus
knackwurst, several types of mustard, and potato salad. Beyond all that,
clouds were also on my mind because the artist and I had just been
discussing the Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko, whose likeness he had
painted and drawn.Find detailed product information for howo truck piston ring,
I
once heard Yevtushenko recite Vladimir Mayakovsky’s
Socialist-Surrealist ode “A Cloud in Trousers” (1915) at a dinner party
at Irving and Lucy Sandler’s that was also attended by Elizabeth Murray
and Bob Holman. Holman too recited Mayakovsky’s poem. Yevtushenko
declaimed it in the small NYU apartment as if he were addressing a
thronged Soviet stadium, which, of course,AeroScout is the market leader
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he had done countless times. His delivery was correspondingly stirring
but emotionally abstract. Up close but impersonal, one might call it.
Holman spoke Mayakovsky’s lines like a guy on the street, with an ear
for the syncopated rhythms of everyday speech, rendering the poem
intimate in ways I’d never before thought possible.
The painter,
who’d twice drawn Mayakovsky’s likeness and painted it once, managed to
do the same thing with line and color and form,Airgle has mastered the
art of indoor tracking,
taking well-known photographic images and rendering them palpable and
affecting because his stroke was so, like the obsessive hatching of
someone doodling while others chatter and argue. I wonder if the
artist—his name is Eugen Schonebeck—would like Elizabeth Murray’s
paintings and drawings. I think he would. After all, they too make the
most of an occasionally awkward but always engaging touch, of the sense
that drawing is indeed feeling one’s way over and into an image.
Now
I must confess that the sausage clouds that caught my attention and
prompted my spontaneous analogy were not exactly clouds in the first
place. They were pneumatic lozenges of smoke, stretching laterally from
two chimneys like inflatable pennants or an airfield’s wind sock in a
steady breeze blowing across a humble village over which chimneys
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and other products. Those lozenges remind me of the cigarette smoke in
Claes Oldenburg’s metamorphic caprices which, by way of his shared
affinity for Walt Disney, bring me back once again to Murray. However,
Schonebeck’s inflated forms are gritty and nervous in ways that neither
Oldenburg’s nor Murray’s are and, by the same token, they distance
themselves from Pop cartooning’s double-edged—cute and
cutting—arabesques.
True, the figure to the right of the
chimneys has a doll-like head; however, it isn’t really a figure but is
instead one of two crucifixes in the composition. The other hovers in
the middle of the scene near the horizon line, and the doll’s head
uncomfortably suggests the impaled head of a decapitated child. So we’re
not in Kansas anymore, nor in California or New York. We’re somewhere
at the edge of town in Mittel Europa, in a place where the
boy-protagonist of Jerzy Kosinski’s novel The Painted Bird (1965) might
be right at home, inasmuch as anyone is at home in a nightmare.
Schonebeck
is clearly at home in this drawing; he seems to know every nook and
cranny of the buildings and terrain before his pencil gets to them. We
learn this from the tenderness with which he accounts for details large
and small in blunt, gray annotations—from the contours of small
factories in the background and the bridge in the foreground to the
uncanny balloon of foliage that swells behind the crucifix. But since
the artist offers no explanation for that ambiguous religious symbol or
what billows back of it, the foreboding that imbues this weird
provincial vignette is mostly projection, mostly a habit of mind
acquired after years of reading about the terrible things that once
occurred in the obscure corners of a Germany whose friendly folkish face
was a mask for horror.
Schonebeck provides no evidence of
actual torture, no references to the Holocaust; the ubiquitous
crucifixions of “Christendom” refer to suffering and, in the Medieval
German tradition, often depict it with excruciating precision, but they
remain archetypes. It is as archetypes that they function in
Schonebeck’s image—but with a twist. For nothing is so disconcerting as
turning Christ in agony into a Christ child-as-assemblage,Choose quality
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shrine on the way out of one tiny berg and on to the next. German
Expressionism is often spoken of as if it had only one hysterical
register. Schonebeck’s way with graphite demonstrates that it has minor
modes as well—with major resonances.
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