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Bruce Adams: Reseach and Development Bruce
Adam's work has long been a vehicle of paradox. Serious allegiance to traditional
figurative and narrative technique coexists with sly digs at art historical
conventions and stylistic clichés. An obvious fascination with the nude
female form is complemented by an equally conspicuous political awareness of
sexism in both art and life. Humor abounds in the work, yet painstakingly
earnest layers of ideological exegesis lie concealed beneath the humorous
veneers. Adams has a huge subject--not just art history, but how that
discipline can be understood or misunderstood through other scholarly
methodologies, such as anthropology and archeology. He's able to pull it off,
partially through his skeptical--thus paradoxical--reverence for the
modernist master narrative. In lush, evocative testimony to the vigor of
Adams' entire oeuvre, past and current, this exhibition allows the viewer to
enjoy an amiable jostling match between visual pleasure and conceptual
challenge. The most recent
paintings are the culmination of Adams' long-standing interest in
"scientific" analysis of past and present culture. In earlier
treatments, Adams presents deliberately ironic tableaus: Restoration
(1988/1995), for example, shows two "scientists"--or at least two
guys in white coats--arguing in the foreground while a languorous Titan nude
(The Venus of Urbino) is glimpsed reposing behind them. In a
recently-glimpsed "authority bite" from a standard art history
text, David Piper stuffily asserts that the Titian is "of course, far
more than a pin-up." Surprising that an art historian would go out of
his way to deny a painting's potential for salacious voyeurism--protesting
too much, surely, about an issue which is rarely brought up in a scholarly
contest. In the 1988 version of the painting, Adams had an actual 1950s-style
pin-up hanging behind the scientists' heads; in 1995 he changed it to a
sculpted female figure. Adams isn't just capriciously appropriating. All
three incarnations of the female form seem simultaneously debased and
celebrated. It has to do with the dispassionate analysis of culture and
civilization. Are paintings decoration, aphrodisiacs, moral parables, or
historical "truth?" An important question, but one unlikely to be
satisfied by scientific analysis. |
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Tableaus such as Restoration
and Kühnel--coherent statements of Adams' conceptual intent--serve as
introductions to a series of works on paper which explore variations of the
basic themes. The series, "Research and Development" and "Men
at Work," say as much about Adams' love of painting and pop culture as
they do about definitions of culture. The "Men at Work" are
briskly, expressively painted, in marked contrast to the careful realism of
Adams' earlier works on canvas. The "Research and Development"
vases are equally expressive, even playful in their exploration of various
painting styles. These works are really the breakthrough works of Adams'
recent career; they herald an interest in exploring the politics of style and
technique that is easily as complex as his exploration of the politics of
content. Not that content is missing. The "Men at Work"
paintings--again, appropriations of obscure, uniquely stale, documentary
photography--aggressively return to the pin-up. They draw sly comparisons
between serious study and casual voyeurism, suggesting that either one can be
an excuse for the other. Adams has a keen appreciation of the wide-ranging
cultural roots of the vulgar pin-up as well as an honest admiration for
pin-ups as engrossing images in their own right. Clearly, the paradox
still holds. What these paintings show is that Adams the painter is
developing an ever more powerful visual shorthand to express the eloquent
narratives of Adams the cultural skeptic. Forum Gallery,
Jamestown, 1996 |