JONAS WOOD
As George Santayana wrote, "Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it." That may be true in love and war but in art history
Daniella Walsh / ArtScene
01 Dec, 2010
By depicting a potted plant in an ancient Greek vase, he does away with the preciousness and, often, pretentiousness that accompanies ancient art and puts off the masses. Instead he reminds his audience that these are pots that might actually have been created for practical, if not necessarily domestic use, relics whose virtue in part lies in the blunt fact that they survived (in some form at least) centuries after their creators turned to dust.
The 鈥淕reek Vessels鈥 are a series of untitled lithographic monoprints that depict the same scene, a plant growing out of a container decorated by the outline of three horses. By distributing dark and light hues throughout, Wood gives each an individual sense of geometry, space and visual appeal. Another series of six woodprints depicts a Greek vessel in grisaille or with a sparing addition of color. Here, even though the subject is ancient, Wood has given it a modern feel through his use of line and color.聽
A series of prints of basketballs is a direct homage to the Pop tradition 鈥 basketballs replace soup cans 鈥 and remind one of Warhol鈥檚 send-up of the overwrought exclamations over the meaning of art and, on the other hand, the potential of everyday objects as apt subject matter for art. And, if anyone is still looking for a connection between sports and art, all it takes is a look at the gazillions of dollars overly tall men receive for pitching a rubber globe through a hooped net and the overheated high end of the art market since the 1980s.聽
Since Warhol鈥檚 death, the vicissitudes of the art market seem to have perverted the artist鈥檚 intention of making art accessible to a mass audience. It鈥檚 accessible, perhaps too much so in terms of content, but unattainable to all but the few financially. Which leads one back to Wood and his sports subjects: They are accessible to the masses via electronic media but how many can actually afford to buy tickets?聽
Hence, if Wood鈥檚 work for this show (more formally complex paintings are omitted) appears straightforward and simple, it鈥檚 anything but simplistic, inviting viewers to look beyond the ostensible subject matter and ponder the purpose and access to art, be it of our own time or deeply historical.