Aaah the days of youth. This article was written
many years ago (1998 I think) and i still wince when i read parts of it.The
original is still here.
Blue
Meany
text and fotos by Jeffree Benet
It was a sunny day in Zizkov when I popped into local artist Jay Meany's
studio, above Akropolis.
In a chaotic room with a spy's eye view of the inner workings of the antiquated
phone switchers at STP's nerve center, I kept to the side and out of the
way in order to avoid the flow of the lease holder's possessions as they
prepared to move on, victims of a greedy, unscrupulous landlord.
Jay will be moving soon, too. Jay's paintings formed a jury along one
wall, where they patiently awaited to begin their journey to a new home;
an exhibition in Paris, France.
Jay's work is an exploration in free-form association, a large departure
from his early training as a figurative painter. His unique process starts
off by working a wooden back board (a bit) applying charcoal drawings
of figures, shapes and images of different sizes, and then laying down
acrylic paint in layers of colors in a manner of underpainting, on top
of which he lays sheets of paper and paints over those.
The result of which is that when the acrylic sets, it acts as a glue,
and as you peel off the layers of paper, they rip and tear forming a very
unique texture.
Once the tearing is finished, he begins sanding through the paint and
paper to bring the original charcoal drawings back up, which gives the
piece a very muted abstractness, a feeling similar to being inside of
an abandoned storefront, very old and neglected.
To add further to this sense of abandonment and decay, he then takes a
torch and burns away at whatever paper remains showing. If the results
are not to his liking, he applies more layers; two, sometimes three, and
close inspection of his work reveals more questions than answers, much
like the artist himself.
The shapes that form the centerpoint of his pieces are subjective to your
interpretations, as he is philosophically a Relativist, a believer that
what the viewer sees is dependent upon their life experiences; however,
he is not so shortsighted as to only use images that have no particular
relevance.
For example "Lord's Prayer/Pledge of Allegiance," explores the
two first things most Americans are forced to memorize from a very early
age, and is very powerful. An appropriate subject for a medium that involves
painting, papering, tearing, burning, cutting, scrubbing, sanding and
more cutting again in a non-stop process of transitions.
"That's why I like flames and papers. I want to give the feeling
that you're discovering something.
I definitely don't want to dictate what the viewer gets out of the artwork.
Definitely the viewer shouldn't have to suffer through it, and in that
same vein, I don't believe that you have to suffer to be an artist. That's
not to say it's easy. Quite the contrary. But unless you're prepared to
make art your trade, what are you going to do? You're going to teach.
And then you're not an artist, you're a teacher. If you went through school
because you wanted to be an artist, then you act as an artist; painting,
sculpting, working, doing whatever you do, showing it, hopefully selling,
generating some sort of income such as you can to buy more supplies and
do more work, and eat and pay rent. But if you can't do that, well, then
you're gonna be a little bitter. If you went to school to be a painter,
and then you're a teacher, then you're not what you wanted to be.
This doesn't mean that all teachers are failed artist: some want to teach.
But there's so much stigma involved in being an artist; "You have
to suffer for your vision" and all this bullsh*t, this romanticism.
It's not romantic, it's stupid, ignorant. You don't have to suffer. Suffering
is a choice. You know what I'm talking about, those artists; "I'm
so miserable", moping around; your art doesn't come from misery,
you're miserable because you're a stupid f*ck!" He laughs.
"I'm not miserable, I do what I want, what I like. That's my choice.
Ultimately, it is about communicating on a different level, a level that
plays upon the spiritual. And this you do by making things a suggestion.
You can't box people in.
I can't just stamp this and bamm, revelation, coz you won't get anything
from it. The only way they can get something out of it is just to suggest
what I'm trying to say." And this theory shows in his works.
The last piece from his current series is called "Oxygen Debt"
and with its muted tones and sparse frantic approach you have no doubt
that the artist himself was gasping for air as he painted it.
"That one was the last painting, and I was struggling to finish it;
I felt like I had been swimming for a long time, a gasping for air. The
feelings I was going through really came out in this piece."
And if you'd like to get a feeling of Jay's works, check out his exhibition
at the Globe in the end of August, through the beginning of September,
or you could always hop on over to Paris to see his work in a group showing.
|