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  • Canvases Evolving From Digital Imagery

    CANVASES EVOLVING FROM DIGITAL IMAGERY
    by Dorothy Shinn

    Akron Beacon Journal
    February 3, 2008 Sunday
    Ohio

    Feb. 3--The impact of digital photography on art and art making is
    becoming more evident.

    Through March 1, Summit Artspace is exhibiting From Camera to Canvas
    -- Jerry Domokur, Michael Gable, Donna Webb because each uses digital
    imagery to create works of art.

    Domokur uses a digital camera and hours of Photoshopping to turn
    everyday images into stunners. Gable often buries photographic images
    in his work, using them as both catalyst and inspiration for his
    lyrically abstract paintings and drawings. Webb plunders obscure,
    vintage texts for arcane imagery, which she uses in her beautifully
    wrought ceramic tiles.

    "We came up with the idea of Camera to Canvas to explore the artist's
    use of camera imagery and the processes involved -- the thought
    process -- as well as where it goes," said Joan Colbert, Summit
    Artspace gallery director.

    This show offers a look at different kinds of processes -- the camera
    image as primary medium; image as inspiration; and image as source.

    It also emphasizes surface. "It's whatever surface the artist chooses
    to work on," Colbert added.

    Domokur sometimes makes a straight digital print; other times, he
    prints onto photographic paper and develops the image chemically. He
    also occasionally uses heat transfer, pressing his images face-down
    onto fabric, much like printing a T-shirt.

    Gable often uses whatever comes to hand, explaining that he doesn't
    want to be constrained by costly materials, so his images often get
    put onto pieces of cardboard or, in one instance, a torn pillow case.

    Webb puts all her images onto ceramic tiles, then arranges them
    thematically.

    Of the three, Domokur is the most prolific by far. He said he brought
    in 21 pieces, of which 15 were selected for the show.

    His process is to take images of a certain site, then manipulate
    and layer them until he gets the effect he wants, a process he calls
    "collaging."

    That's what's at work in the hurly-burly image Ohio State Fair, a
    heat transfer on paper of a booth and environs on the fair's midway,
    with elements -- and color -- punched up to the "wow" level, then
    layered within an inch of its life.

    This is an image that keeps you looking, not only to figure out where
    all the elements come from, but also to try to guess how Domokur
    did it.

    Crash, on the other hand, is a pretty straightforward (for Domokur)
    photograph of a wrecked car, but given the high-tone treatment of a
    Lambda print, an archival process in which the image is printed on
    photo paper and developed in a darkroom.

    Gathering is an image that came from the pages of the Beacon Journal
    when University of Akron students lighted a bonfire during spring
    semester.

    "I thought it was a neat image, so I changed it and played around with
    it more," he said. "It was a black-and-white image, then I colorized
    it, cut and pasted, overlaid it and did some drawing, using a Wacom
    tablet." The resulting image has been so transformed that there's
    almost no hint of the bonfire that inspired Domokur in the first place.

    Domokur also likes to do panoramas, then paste them together, either
    in PhotoShop or using paper and glue, creating long, narrow vistas into
    which he often inserts borrowed images from such sources as magazines.

    Frolicking is one such image, with nude young women borrowed from
    a Japanese magazine, then blurred, hyperextended and colorized and
    inserted into a manipulated, panoramic vista of his own backyard.

    "I was going to be an illustrator at one time," Domokur said. "Then
    my nephew gave me a computer. It took me quite a while to work it,
    but I finally learned to manipulate images in it. Maybe because of
    my background, that's where I went with it."

    He continues to show his hard-won mastery in images such as Blue
    Moonlight Garden, which he said he put in the show "to demonstrate
    that I could work it in any manner."

    In all these, the imagery is for the most part recognizable, but
    Domokur said he's recently begun going more abstract. These works
    have attracted the notice of several show judges, including the one
    who juried the Butler's 71st Area Artists Annual Exhibit on view
    through today in Youngstown.

    While Domokur is more than forthcoming about how he creates his works,
    Gable is somewhat the opposite.

    "These come from an assortment of references," Gable said, gesturing
    at the nine works he has in the show.

    "I have stacks and stacks of photographs and drawings," he added,
    indicating several feet with his arm raised. "I don't have ideas. I
    just go and start making marks. There's no one particular subject
    matter. I'll just start pulling things from anywhere and everywhere."

    Gable would admit to influences from Arshile Gorky and Cy Twombly,
    and these are evident in his work. He especially seemed to like the
    association with the Armenian Gorky, noting that he's one-fourth
    Armenian. But he didn't care for the Abstract Expressionist label,
    because he said that hints at certain attitudes and what he considers
    false posing.

    "It's maybe a little bit A-E, but it's subject matter I'm trying to
    get away from -- recognizable imagery -- which is why I use only a
    handful of recognizable references. . . . Recognizable imagery and
    representation carry too much baggage. Too much is read into it,
    and too much I don't like to talk about."

    Gable's use of photography is straightforward, with no manipulation.

    "A lot of my photographs tend to be close-up examinations of things,"
    he said. "I approach a photograph like a painter. I emphasize the
    flatness and the composition."

    All Gable's works in this show are untitled. There are two works on
    something other than cardboard or paper, and those are the large oil
    on canvas Gable descriptively labels "mylarmaster" on the publicity
    photo, and the oil on linen he's labeled "pillow."

    The oil on canvas seems to have deep space behind the strokes and
    shapes floating on its surface. An elegant work with echoes of
    Twombly, it has already been sold. The work described as "pillow"
    has been painted on a pillowcase, a la Robert Rauschenberg.

    "It was just a piece of fabric lying in the corner of my studio with
    some water stains on it," Gable said. "I painted it on one side and
    one day I turned it over and I liked it. It's bleeding in from the
    other side. I think I may have realized what was happening on the
    other side and tweaked it from the opposite side."

    I won't tell you what images he collaged into them, because, as Gable
    correctly pointed out, that tends to make the viewer look for, then
    zero in on, the recognizable portion of the painting. That destroys
    what he's trying to do and in a sense causes the painting to break
    down, once you see the image.

    It's very difficult to keep people from looking for recognizable
    imagery in abstract work because that's what our brains are hard-wired
    to do. So Gable's only recourse is to obscure as much of the original
    inspiring images as possible and hope inquiring minds don't find them.

    Webb, on the other hand, is perfectly happy to use borrowed images,
    almost completely unaltered, except perhaps for changes in colors,
    to make her large ceramic tiles.

    "These are all images from the fabulous 33-volume Istanbul
    Encyclopedia," she said.

    "Ohio State is the only place that has it. Even though it was done in
    1958, there are all these images of people, houses, festivities that
    are quite old, and I've been going through it and picking out images.

    I have a Turkish friend who I've been going to to find out who these
    people are and to translate for me."

    Her investigation of this source material has not only given her new
    and unusual imagery to work with, but it also has taken her to Turkey
    twice. And she's discovered not only is art approached in a very
    different way in Turkey than in the United States (or in Europe, for
    that matter), but also that sometimes making art in Turkey isn't safe.

    The first two tiles in the exhibit are portraits titled Sait Faik
    and Safiye Ayla.

    "Sait Faik was a short-story writer," Webb said. "He wrote about the
    ethnic groups like the Armenians and the Greeks, and writing about
    them put him in jeopardy. He got a lot of criticism for writing about
    them. He's sort of like Hemingway, short, direct sentences."

    Safiye Ayla was a famous singer, Webb said. Often dubbed the
    "suffering" or "grieving" nightingale of Turkey, Ayla made some 500
    recordings and appeared in movies and concerts and performed on Ankara
    and Istanbul radio stations.

    "I'm interested in Turkish culture and the contrast between the West
    and the East, the medieval and the modern," Webb said.

    "I've been there twice. In 2005, I lectured at Marmara University
    and got invited back. When I returned, I took students with me."

    She said she went to the Istanbul Modern Museum, "and I discovered
    fabulous modern art works by people I'd never heard of."

    Webb said that she has spent more time since coming home, however,
    exploring Ottoman ideas about art. "It meant looking at the art world
    again because it's not what I thought it was.

    "In books that I looked at, some of the 19th-century Turkish women
    wore veils, but they were very stylish and pretty, transparent and
    flirty, But the last time I went to Turkey, the women who wore veils
    wore these heavy, black things and the women were militant about
    that. Things are going backwards, it seems.

    "Here's Ataturk," she said, pointing to one of the tiles showing
    the face of the former Turkish strongman looking through a screened
    window while a bird sits in the foreground. "He was an incredible
    politician. But you can't make fun of him like this in Turkey. It's
    against the law." Another of her tiles, titled Denge (Balance) shows
    a small leopard in one corner. "Denge means balance, and that's the
    thing about Turkey, it's a balance between East and West and it's
    carrying on this incredible balancing act between all these various
    ethnic groups," Webb said. "That's the Istanbul leopard, which has
    just become extinct. My friend said a villager just killed the last
    one -- at least that's what they think. I hope it's not true."

    Two gallery events will be held during the balance of the show -- a
    composition and blind contour drawing workshop with Gable on Feb. 16;
    and a postcard collage workshop with Gretchen Bierbaum ($5 materials
    fee at the door) on March 1.
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