Devin Thor: Paleolitic Creatures Cut from Stone

 

50882500_10216427681391788_8757765507152609280_nWith several unique stone sculptures now on exhibit as part of MOAH’s powerful Peace on Earth, running at the Lancaster museum through April 21st, it’s a good time to take a look at Devin Thor’s powerful sculptural presence.

At MOAH, Thor presents three pieces from his Paleolithic Creatures stone works, raw, unique works that make extinct creatures live again as sculptures cut from sandstone. Both in their use of color: russet, gold, brown; and in their use of material, they appear as if they arose from the earth itself, creatures of a Southwestern world, of raw, open plains and red-rock wanderings.

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The artist’s use of material makes these flat works fascinating in texture as well as image. Seeming tribal in nature, their beautiful simplicity serve as an elegy to the losses of the past, and a pristine prayer for a better future. Thor is a geologist as well as an artist, which is in part the likely reason for his choice of material here. The rough brown surface creates an elegant but primal visual perspective, a tribute to the beings themselves, and the land on which they roamed. His minimal approach is wonderfully relatable; he has shaped easily recognizable, universal figures that open the world of the past with hope for tomorrow.

Thor says of his stone work that it is “an homage to our prehistoric ancestors, but also an exploration of the global influence of humans on our environment…” adding that “modern humans have modified the planet and now must take on a stewardship role, otherwise we might face the permanence of extinction ourselves.”

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Inspired in part by the cave paintings of Lascaux, Thor relates that he paints and sculpts using “the energy that flows from my emotional imagination. As a geologist, I explore the structure of the natural world with the logic of a scientist.”

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The works displayed at MOAH include the jewel eyed “Antelope Doe and Antelope Fawn II” as well as “Sentinel Bison II.” The former pieces incorporate vividly colored stained glass as their eyes, and stand on thin iron legs.

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The latter work has no crafted eye, yet the crags of the sandstone chosen to create his bison series hang as if they were fossilized fur, disguising the eye of the massive creatures.

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Some bison images Thor has created are grazing, or bent; some crafted from cast iron, others from different colors of rock.

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In each, there is a poignant reminder that despite the bulk, the weighty purpose of these beings, they were in the end too fragile to survive. They are a cautionary tale for preservation of other species, and our own.

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Thor also creates the more whimsical wood and found objects in his Gumby Goes series. These fanciful images are based on the Claymation character of Gumby, his magical adventures, and his iconic cultural status. Despite these green wooden works witty characteristics, Thor says they represent a darker side of human nature. With gauges as eyes, a gear ringing his mouth, and an alarmed expression, “Gumby Goes Borg X2” is a study of futuristic anxiety. “Gumby Goes Pinball,” which includes pinball machine parts, is brighter in color but no less fraught with a sense of anxious awareness of the human condition. We are perhaps all being played.

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Additional sculptural works include more abstract images, such as “Space Relic X01,” created using salvaged Sycamore wood, plywood, anodized aluminum, and stainless steel tubes. Again, Thor has managed to create a work both delicate and substantial, named for the space beyond us yet somehow representative of the planet on which we reside.

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Thor’s sculpture are indeed a sign of our times: of life on this planet, our collective past, and our equally bound future.

Four Solo Shows Connect at LAAA’s Gallery 825

 

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The “4 Solo Shows” now at the Los Angeles Art Association’s Gallery 825 are brilliant parts of a dazzling whole. From Chenhung Chen’s freestanding, exciting sculptures created from wire, cords, and the detritus of technology to Seda Saar’s complex, blossoming  works in colored plexiglass and mirrors, both what we see and what we imagine come to vivid life.

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Above, Chen with Entelechy #23

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Chenhung Chen’s “Entelechy” is a world built with wires and crocheted metal alloys, with each piece as packed with motion and inside-out exposed imagery as if living creatures have sprung to life from an alchemy of technology and spirit. With each piece vividly different and fluid, the powerful nature of Chen’s vision draws upon the feminine and masculine in each of us, upon the kinetic nature of life itself, humming through our veins as electricity does through wire.  Don’t miss the chance to “plug into” Chen’s compelling work.

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Above, Janine Brown

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Janine Brown’s “The Wallflower Project” haunts with delicate, almost translucent portraits captured through her self-made cardboard pinhole camera. The idea of a person being a wallflower is the inspiration for her works, an idea which came from a casual remark about her husband’s handsomeness and her own tendency to take a step into the background. The word wallflower was, the artist notes, “coined in Victorian times, a time period in which actual wallpaper was popular.” She started gathering wall- paper samples to create a look in which the subject begins to disappear into the patterns themselves. As her project has evolved, so has her art form, moving from the black and white images in this show, to color images printed directly on wallpaper itself.  The pieces here are haunting, images of the past captured through the prism of the present.

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Above, Seda Saar

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Seda Saar’s “Polyhedron : Art + Reality Are One” is all about illusion. Saar, who has also worked her magic in theme park design as well as sculpture, pulls viewers into a 3D vision that appears to go on forever, “like the ocean, on and on.” Layering light and color constructions made of plexiglass and mirrors, the trippy through-the-looking-glass feeling of Saar’s work is truly magical. The judicious use of mirrors creates a scene that feels like an alternate reality – figuratively stepping inside, the viewer sees the building blocks of fractals creating an entire universe both light and bright.

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Above, Devin Thor

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Devin Thor’s “Paleolithic Creatures” are also from an alternate reality, one in which extinct creatures live again as sculptures cut from sandstone. A geologist as well as an artist, Thor’s flat images are tribal in nature, astonishing in their simplicity, an elegy to existence lost, a hopeful monument to better stewardship for our planet. His minimalized approach is purposeful: limiting the number of lines necessary to define his creatures creates a universal reality uniting creatures of all kinds, even humans.

Unifying this exhibition of four brilliant artists is each of their attempts to create a reality that moves and engages. Whether through mirrors, wires, sandstone, or photographic images new worlds are opened, ready and waiting to explore and engage.