Diamonds hidden within the Sawdust
- Share via
AT THE GALLERIES
Art festivals are sometimes more “festival” than “art.” You pay your
admission at the gate, spend about an hour walking past booths of
mediocrity peppered with the inevitable handmade ceramic coffee mugs,
and go home feeling cheated somehow. However, I always make a point
of braving the crowds to attend Sawdust, because I know that at some
point I’ll come across something wonderful. What follows are a few
highlights from this year’s offerings. Pick up a directory and check
them out.
There’s festival-regular Marsh Scott. Scott works in a remarkably
varied set of media, including oil on canvas, mixed media, encaustic
and sculpting with paper or steel. Nevertheless, Scott produces a
remarkably consistent style of expression. Her range of media gives
her work a variety within that consistency.
Scott uses, for instance, a fairly narrow palette range. The
colors are warm and mellow, even when she uses high values of red or
green. She works in abstract forms, except for her sculptures, which
are representative (somehow, even the steel seems warm, probably
because they are positive or negative cutouts). Two smaller canvases,
“Verdant Woods” and “Looking for Order,” are highly textured with
impressive underpainting and glaze work. “Looking for Order” uses a
surprising combination of grays and mallard greens, and much use of
gesso and modeling paste beneath. Both have a sense of movement about
them without the chaos often found in abstracts.
Scott has a range of objects on view at the Sawdust this year, but
seeing encaustic out in the open air presents an unusual opportunity.
Encaustic is an ancient method involving layers of wax built up and
sculpted on a hard surface. Scott works with the panels laid flat,
which allows for a denser build up of layers.
This, in combination with Scott’s neutral palette, produces an
interesting sheen and texture in her work. “Markings” (48x72) is an
outstanding example of this. You would suspect certain heaviness with
such a technique, but this panel seems almost like a window. Many
layers have created a deep translucency. A simple sepia-toned square
rides in the middle of taupes, whites and yellows in the
underpainting. Sharper brown lines cross through the field of color.
It is, you could say, a negative of a Rothko-neutrals instead of
vibrant primaries, texture rather than glaze, definition instead of
blending. But it has a similar, romantic effect. And the unusual
shimmer of the wax on the surface makes a very individual statement
that is lovely in natural light, as if you were looking through oiled
parchment paper. When you stop by, ask Scott about her working
methods. She will enthusiastically discuss them with you.
Walk on and you come across the oils of Karen Petty. Petty
produces work on linen or canvas that seems like enlarged panels from
graphic novels. There are organic nudes in strange scenes,
Rousseau-like abstract jungles, women with flowing dark hair,
spinning over clocks or roses. The saturation of color is intense,
giving some of the canvases a stained-glass quality. They are
narrative and sometimes provocative, and stand out from the
landscapes and animal portraits around them.
It is also worth taking a closer look at Sara Kirk’s mobiles. Kirk
is also a long-time exhibitor at Sawdust, and her work drew a small
crowd around her booth. Mobiles seem to please everyone -- they are
both substantial and unsubstantial at the same time. Kirk’s anodized
aluminum shapes move lightly, and disappear when viewed from the
side. They come in a range of colors, from a tonal study of blue to
contrasting brights to coppers. Some spread out horizontally on lithe
sliver wires; others hang vertically, pendant-like. Each gives focus
to the air around it, creating an interesting kinetic effect with
every passing disturbance in the air.
Finally, there is the fascinating, hyper-real and nostalgic water
colors of David Milton and Scott Moore. Both artists offer lithograph
reproductions of their work. David Milton produces nostalgic
close-ups of pop culture in California in its 1950s prime. It’s
difficult not to get excited seeing a hyper-bright, super-clean
depiction of Pink’s Hamburgers, a Fosters Freeze sign, or the giant
tan “O” of Randy’s Doughnuts. Scott Moore’s take on the same theme is
at times surreal. A blond, clean-cut longboarder stands on a bowl of
apples in front of a vintage produce ad. In the giclee (ink-jet
printing) “Veg-e-table,” a farmer plows a field on a red-and-white
checkered tablecloth, working around a giant vintage ketchup bottle
and canned vegetables. They are humorous renditions of a mythic time
in American culture and work well with a warm California day at an
outdoor art festival.
Take a stroll, see the glass-blowing demonstration, watch the
potter’s wheels -- but above all, talk to the artists about their
work. That’s the best part of an art festival: the opportunity for
the community to speak directly with working artists.
* BOBBIE ALLEN is a poet and writer who has taught art theory and
criticism. She currently teaches at Saddleback College.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.