Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Painter Ed Sarkis examines the state of humanity

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Painter Ed Sarkis examines the state of humanity

    DetNews.Com
    Friday, March 25, 2005


    Painter Ed Sarkis examines the state of humanity.

    Review

    Museum of New Art combines the works of 4 solo shows

    Exhibit captures the demise of Detroit, terrorism and war in
    photographs, paintings.

    By Joy Hakanson Colby / The Detroit News

    Four Solos

    GRADE: B+

    Museum of New Art (MONA)

    7 N. Saginaw St., Pontiac

    12-6 p.m. Thurs.-Sat.

    through April 3

    Call (248) 210-7560


    By any name, the Museum of New Art (MONA) is an art gallery known for
    creative exhibits and a director who likes to tweak the public's
    sensibilities. The place lives up to its reputation on both counts
    with the current offerings.

    Four solo shows under the MONA umbrella are spread over two floors of
    the Oakland Art Center. Photographers John Cynar and the mysterious
    Stig Eklund share one second floor space. Painter Ed Sarkis holds
    forth across the hall. Downstairs in a gallery earmarked for emerging
    artists is an installation by Audra Wolowiec.

    Although the exhibits have topical references, the artists deal with
    them individually. For instance, in his series of black-and-white
    digital images devoted to the demise of a central city, Cynar avoids
    such obvious subjects as burned-out buildings to concentrate on
    doorways and windows photographed in Detroit's Woodward corridor after
    midnight. Together, these pictures reflect the sadness and sense of
    loss that many Detroiters feel these days.

    Cynar, a sculptor turned photographer, also is showing a striking
    series of two-part digital images of churches on one side and radio,
    cell phone or TV towers on the other side. They are united by overlays
    of color.

    Sarkis takes on terrorism, war and other political and social
    conflicts that mark our times. He works with a restless, probing line
    and gestural brushwork to convey images of hooded prisoners in
    Afghanistan, riot police in Seattle or the World Trade Center
    bombing. The paintings have a universal quality and question the
    meaning of humanity.

    Now for Stig Eklund, who is billed as a Norwegian photographer; he
    takes command of digital technology, creating haunting portraits,
    shadowy figures and urban and country landscapes. Some of the
    landscapes glow in the dark thanks to luminescent paper.

    Eklund, as it turns out, is none other than MONA's director Jef
    Bourgeau, who also excels as a painter, a video artist and a maker of
    constructions. By any name, Bourgeau is one terrific all-around
    artist.

    You can reach Joy Hakanson Colby at (313) 222-2276 or [email protected].

    http://www.detnews.com/2005/events/0503/25/E01-128191.htm
Working...
X