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ArtHop galleries honor Saroyan

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  • ArtHop galleries honor Saroyan

    ArtHop galleries honor Saroyan

    One remarkable piece is crafted by using gunpowder.
    By Felicia Cousart Matlosz and Donald Munro / The Fresno Bee
    02/14/08 22:04:55


    February ArtHop Night No. 1 -- we're all adjusting to this new format
    of two nights per month -- ventured into William Saroyan-inspired
    motifs, metal impressions and religious imagery.

    The first Thursday of the month for ArtHop now focuses solely on
    downtown Fresno and the Tower District. At Gallery 25 and the Fig
    Tree Gallery, it's space time for writer Saroyan in this centennial
    year of his birth in Fresno.

    One chat-stoking piece, at Gallery 25's full devotion to Saroyan,
    is "Tracy's Tiger" by Robert Weibel. He's been striving to master
    the use of gunpowder in his drawings. The result for this show is
    a flowing convergence of blasts and lines curved into an energetic
    mass of browns, black-browns and mustard yellows -- an Asian-looking
    tiger -- on a ream of construction paper.

    Weibel says he became intrigued with the possibilities through
    the massive gunpowder pieces created by Chinese-born artist Cai
    Guo-Qiang. Weibel says that in this method, an artist is "using
    explosives for something creative instead of something destructive."

    (The Saroyan reference, by the way, is from a play called "Tracy's
    Tiger" based on a Saroyan novella titled "The Barber Whose Uncle Had
    His Head Bitten Off by a Circus Tiger.")

    Just a few steps away is Karen LeCocq's "I Used to Believe I Had
    Forever, Now I'm Not So Sure." (The title refers to a 1968 collection
    of Saroyan short stories.) The large multimedia piece features an
    image of the great man himself, his head resting against his right
    fist and his eyes downcast in a contemplative moment. LeCocq uses
    gads of material -- wood, bambo blind, an Asian broom, digital print
    on fabric, rusted steel, acrylic and wax -- to create an arresting
    piece of a famous man in near-final repose.

    At Fig Tree, the back portion of the venue is devoted to
    Saroyan-spurred work. Bill Bruce, in an apparent ode to the writer's
    well-known penchant for riding a bicycle around Fresno, uses black
    inner tubes for three pieces. In "Circle of Tubes," for example,
    he tautly stretched and overlapped them over a square.

    The Chris M. Sorensen Studio offers what you might call "The Two
    Bobs" show. It's a joint exhibition by Bob Gifford and Bob Levine,
    who became friends years ago while working at the Sorenson studio,
    and decided they wanted to show their stuff together.

    A standout among Gifford's metal pieces is his whimsical "Indian
    Dancer." With its prickly spines jutting from various planes of metal
    sticking out in different directions, it looks positively substantial
    -- until you touch it. (We'd like to make the point that Bee arts
    reporter Donald Munro was given permission by Gifford to do so.) The
    various arms on the abstract figure are balanced so they wobble
    slightly. It's an amazing work practically begging you to reach out
    and feel the spines.

    Levine's show, which he titles "The Mandala Series," consists both
    of paintings and sculptures. He's enamored of meticulously crafted
    circles, and he incorporates basic religious imagery (Jewish menorahs,
    Buddhist depictions, Hindu allusions) in works that have a vaguely
    Eastern and meditative feel. There's a determined symmetrical energy
    to much of his work.

    Just one more reminder: The second February ArtHop night is the
    third Thursday of each month. Next Thursday, venues in Fig Garden,
    north Fresno and Clovis will be open to visitors. Information
    about participating ArtHop locations and shows can be found at
    fresnoarthop.org.

    The reporters can be reached at [email protected],
    [email protected] or (559) 441-6330.
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