Artist Fatemeh Burnes, above
Through May 4th, the Torrance Art Museum is vibrating with a rainbow palette and exceptional non-figurative paintings. This is a don’t-miss show, alive with brush stroke and texture, a tribute to the art of painting and the risk of creating work that requires both contemplation and jubilation.
These are evocative, deeply felt, and entirely unique human works, a response, as curators Marie Thibeault and Max Presneill note, to the “concerns and expectations of AI” dominating the artistic landscape today. These often large-scale, always immersive works are highly personal, and yes, risk taking in the aptly named RISKY BUSINESS: A PAINTER’S FORUM.
The unique and wonderfully painterly world the artists create here are each special, unpredictable, and fresh. In short, they are everything that AI is not. This overflowing cornucopia of fruitful art is created by an impressive selection of creators including Nick Aguayo, Sharon Barnes, Michael Bauer, Fatemeh Burnes, Galen Cheney, Mark Dutcher, Barbara Friedman, John Goetz, Zachary Keeting, Robert Kingston, Christopher Kuhn, Annie Lapin, Michael Mancari, Ali Smith, Vian Sora, Marie Thibeault, Liliane Tomasko, Chris Trueman, Suzanne Unrein, and Audrey Tulmiero Welch.
In a contrasting but vivid and exciting installation, the museum’s Dark Room is concurrently showing The Reflecting Pool: Emergence of the Third Eye. Here artist Kenneth Salter employs the technological to create an interactive device that generates mesmerizing, neo-psychedelic, fractal images and sounds. Responding mysteriously and marevlously to movements of the viewer’s hands, it’s an immersive and hypnotic work that surrounds and soothes.
Not to be forgotten – although admittedly not to my personal taste – is a traveling exhibition in Gallery 2. The Marvels of Old Masters: Rembrandt, Goya and Dürer brings local viewers over 60 artworks on loan from the Park West Museum in Southfield, Michigan. These are impressive wood carvings, engraving, and woodcuts from three giants of art history: Rembrandt van Rijn (1606-1669), Francisco Goya (1746-1828), and Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528). It’s a terrific art inclusion for TAM, and don’t pass it by – however, for us, the truly riveting work is the living color shining in the main gallery and the dark room.
TAM is located at 3320 Civic Center Drive in Torrance, and is open 11-5 Tuesday-Saturday.
- Genie Davis; photos by Genie Davis