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(ARTKC365) Piecework Memories : Tanya Hartman | Review

Mid-America's Visual Arts Publication

(ARTKC365) Piecework Memories : Tanya Hartman

"Reliquary" (Detail), Stitching, Collage, Paint on Paper.

Tanya Hartman
Rhyming the Lines

11 a.m.-5 p.m.

Sherry Leedy Contemporary Art
2004 Baltimore
Kansas City, MO
816.221.2626

Hours: 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Tuesday-Saturday
Runs through: Feb. 27

Gallery site: http://www.sherryleedy.com

It's fairly common to speak of "reading into" a work of art.

In the case of Tanya Hartman's Rhyming the Lines, now on display at Sherry Leedy Contemporary Art, that phrase is far more than metaphor.

Hartman, an associate professor at the University of Kansas, stitches together (literally) two art forms, visual and literary. The former aspect draws in viewers from a distance; together, the images and text set the hook. The goal, Hartman writes, is to show reverence for the power in language and image to illuminate experience within the imagination.

She types. She stitches. She paints. She scores.

There are narratives of pain and joy, petitions for grace and strength, some works with finite storylines and others that will continue to develop so long as Hartman draws breath.

No, you get no excerpts here. The only way to truly appreciate the pieces is to see and read them yourself. You'll need to allot a decent-sized chunk of time; one work alone, I Wrote a Short Story (Rhyming the Lines) is twenty-seven feet long.

File Reliquary, one panel of which is shown above, under the "ongoing" category. Hartman creates each panel after a birthday, to sum up the previous year. Sort of gives new meaning to the term "life's work," doesn't it?

Hartman's chosen materials, media and techniques influence more than the purely visual parts of her art. They also reinforce the idea of life — and of the memories created over a lifetime —as fragile and alterable, things constructed and assembled bit by bit.

In her words: Sewing into paper, writing, and recollecting upon paper, stippling paper, and agitating paper with ink and needle, creates an obsessive surface quality that acts as a metaphor for memory itself, and for memory’s tendency to agitate, to poke and to be embellished.

For example: On March 15, 1979, the Police stopped in Kansas City while touring in support of their first album, Outlandos d'Amour. They played at a club, no longer extant, called One Block West.

According to Sting, seven people showed up. But around here, in the early 1980s, you couldn't swing a stick at Parody Hall or Blayney's without hitting at least eight people claiming to have been at the One Block West show.

What does that have to do with Hartman's work? Only this: Don't read this post, look at the image up top and spend the next 20 years convincing yourself you saw Rhyming the Lines. Go make some honest memories with the real thing.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Kansas City Jewish Museum of Contemporary Art launches the Epsten Gallery’s 10th Anniversary Season with Larry Thomas: Ploys & Decoys, a solo exhibition of new large-scale mixed media paintings and portfolio prints at the Epsten Gallery at Village Shalom.

Contact: Marcus Cain, Curator (mcain@kcjmca.org)

Kansas City Jewish Museum of Contemporary Art

Epsten Gallery at Village Shalom

5500 West 123rd Street (at Nall Avenue)

Overland Park, KS 66209

www.kcjmca.org (913-266-8413)

Kansas City, MO / Overland Park, KS — The Kansas City Jewish Museum is pleased to present Larry Thomas: Ploys & Decoys, a solo exhibition of new large-scale mixed media paintings and portfolio prints by Kansas-based artist Larry Thomas. This exhibition opens Sunday, January 17, 2010, at the Epsten Gallery at Village Shalom with a public reception from 2-4 p.m. and an informal conversation with the artist at 3 p.m. in the Village Shalom Social Hall. Larry Thomas: Ploys & Decoys remains on view through Sunday, February 28, 2010.

Larry Thomas: Ploys & Decoys

Kansas-based artist and long-time Johnson County Community College Professor and Art Department Chair Larry Thomas presents Ploys & Decoys, a new solo exhibition of large-scale mixed media paintings, and portfolio prints. Within this new body of work, Thomas combines digital and actual collage with traditional painting techniques and state-of-the-art printing methods to address the concept of camouflage as a means of both concealing and revealing thoughts, ideas, and emotions.

Neither abstract nor entirely representational, Thomas’ images exist in an in-between realm, where close inspection reveals forms that flutter and swirl into recognition. Thomas uses the visual language of camouflage to remind us of its usefulness as an “immune system” in the management of everyday life among the natural world, within war’s industrial complex, throughout our society’s popular culture, and as we individually negotiate the social situations of daily life.

Established in 1991, the purpose of Kansas City Jewish Museum of Contemporary Art (KCJMCA) is to provide innovative art exhibitions and related programming that engage seniors and diverse audiences from all segments of our community to enrich lives and celebrate our common humanity through art. KCJMCA realizes this goal through two projects: The Epsten Gallery at Village Shalom and through partnerships with local, regional and national institutions that engage in KCJMCA’s Museum Without Walls exhibition program.

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