A fresh pair of shows with street-art roots opened this month in two alternative gallery spaces. Each exhibit blurs the line between the art-going crowd and potential new clientele for the host businesses, while presenting three talented artists to an array of audiences who might not frequent the usual art houses.
Gracing the walls of Erich Lehman's semi-permanent pop-up 1975 Gallery at Surface Salon is "Saints + PRVRTS," a collaborative graffiti art show by two members of The Sweet Meat Co., St. Monci and Mr. Prvrt. The duo completed this new body of tight, detailed work - 37 pieces in all, juggled with full-time jobs - in a short two-week aftermath of The Sweet Meat's installation at the Hungerford, an endeavor which caused them some stress but resulted in a set of seriously crispy paintings. And impressively, they're about to do it all over again as part of the On The Cut stencil show line-up at 4Walls Gallery on April 2.
"I repainted six paintings (two of the sets) three times before I was finally happy with the direction they were taking," says St. Monci, the artist behind the triptych "saints." "I wanted to do something different than what people had seen from me, and the white backgrounds weren't creating that sense of ‘purity' I was looking for, ironically. I knew I wanted the pieces to be very angelic/holy, but in a very kitschy way, borderline cheesy. The challenge was taking my ‘graffiti' language - a language known to be bold, hard and edgy - and reflecting that into a softer more heavenly/happy energy."
His solution was to paint bold and citrus-hued backgrounds, with bursts of abstracted, converging white-light energy, marked sporadically with pencil to give a hint of the architectural element of heaven, topped off with high-gloss glaze, and sided with what he calls "awesomely bad gold plywood edges," meant to resemble Catholic altarpieces.
St. Monci's freestyle, intangible holy-holies have puckish titles like "On the 3rd Day He Chilled," "The Ghetto Crusades," and "Father, Son, Holy Cow," and contrast nicely with Mr. Prvrt's stenciled "deviants": scavenged trays, platters, and wood cutting boards painted in jewel tones and layered with highly detailed stencils forming the black-and-white images of various pervy celebs, a few of the artist's friends, as well as a self-portrait.
Some of the characters are expected - Pee-Wee Herman, Howard Stern, Robin Williams, Larry Flynt - but others left me scratching my head and sifting through my limited tabloid knowledge. The artist says that "the one consistency between them all is that I consider each person to have an influence on my artwork and personality. Some of these figures go back to my childhood, others are current favorites."
Some of the pervs are dead saints of their fields, which lead me to consider how, conversely, St. Monci's heavenly lights could be considered perverted. Oh, that's right - the Immaculate Conception! Lord, have mercy.
I noticed the lack of female representation with a bit of an under-the-radar smirk, until I spotted, high up on the walls, the collaborative pieces "Desperate Housewives" 1 & 2, each holding a 1950's iconic wife-y silhouette, visible under a hot-mess smattering of stencil patterning and ribbons of freestyle paint, and poised primly above the clouds. The collab pieces are playful in their definitions of what makes a saint and what makes a perv, and all of the delightful grayscale in between. The title's nod to the TV show also perhaps provides a little commentary on our voyeuristic tendencies, cleverly bringing the saintly audience into the perv group after all.
Speaking of categories, when asked about the meaning of "pervert," Mr. Prvrt, who dislikes strict definitions, provided a varied list that included, besides the sexually-connotated noun, the act of debasing - which wryly comments on the graff roots of the show - and a person altered by a religious belief, especially when "regarded as erroneous." That brings a more complex definition to his alliance with a saint.
Of this collaboration, Mr. Prvrt says that the pieces resulted from the "idea of embracing the contrast and compliments between our styles," and that working within The Sweet Meat Co. has given his work a new life. "In the past three or four months I have managed to crank out more work than I have in years. Being around a group of people that's so talented and so diverse has given me so much drive to keep improving what I do [...] It means more opinions, more ideas, more growth...and obviously better art."
Shawn Dunwoody, artist and driving force behind countless art-facilitation efforts in Rochester, recently scored yet another alternative-space satellite gallery (joining Eye Candy Clothing on East) for his home base 4Walls Gallery on Elton Street. Dunwoody says he chose a location in the St. Paul district because lonely Renaissance Gallery is sitting down there, off the beaten path and detached from the known arts neighborhoods, and he thought there needed to be a more developed art scene in that direction. Dunwoody is calling his gallery within Venu Resto-Lounge "The St. Paul Project," and its successful first show with new works by graphic designer and indie artist Kurt Ketchum brought out a large and diverse cut of Rochester's population for opening night.
Seven large mixed-media pieces in black, white, and pastel hues brighten the cozy-dim lounge holding Ketchum's zen-sentinel abstracted figures. His process is a rather mathematical synthesizing of a multitude of influences, including typography, modern pod-like architecture, graffiti, and native Oceanic tribal art. Of the inspiration for his work, Ketchum says, "I absorb information from various sources. Mostly everyday visuals: nature, debris, architecture, industrial systems.... The characters and objects become vehicles. Spirits in a sense." Though largely abstract, some subjects seem to possess a certain aware presence.
When asked about his work, Ketchum waxes both aesthetic and philosophic, and says he pays obsessive attention to spatial relationships, and the way the natural and manmade worlds are "constructed with certain constant ratios and rhythms that we artists are mimicking intuitively or with varying degrees of careful calculation."
He continues: "Lately I often just marvel at the way it all just flows together with or without me. Of course these moments are often fleeting and it is not long before I am trying to carve out a nice portion of that proverbial pie just for me. An endless dance."
"Saints & PRVRTS"
Through April 30
1975 Gallery @ Surface Salon, 658 South Ave
466-4278, 1975ish.com
Tue-Thu 12-8 p.m., Fri 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sat 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
The Saint Paul Project Featuring the work of Kurt Ketchum
Through April 6
4Walls @ Venu Resto-Lounge & Nightclub, 151 St. Paul St.
442-7824, fourwallsartgallery@gmail.com
Mon-Sat 8 p.m.-2 a.m.





Comments for "REVIEW: "Saints & PRVRTS"; The St. Paul Project " (1)
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Thievin' Stephen said on Mar. 17, 2010 at 12:59pm
Great article! Mr. PRVRT, St. Monci, and Kurt Ketchum will all be featured in the stencil art show ON THE CUT on April 2, 2010 at Four Walls Gallery (34 Elton. St.)
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