Critique – Homes of My Past

 

Homes of My Past is part of the Homesick exhibit at the Art Gallery inside LifeLink Church (1015 S Cooper St, Memphis, TN 38104); it is on display through November 4th 2009.


The first thing noticeable about Rachel Lockridge’s paintings is the extreme vertical orientation of the pieces. They are in the most elementary critique simple, architectural paintings, and as such a horizontal direction seems far more a propos—assuming that the buildings are the subjects. These are not skyscrapers piercing the clouds; they are residential buildings gathered close to the ground, towered over by the local flora, and dwarfed by the vertical: the endless blue sky, the billowy clouds and the infinite regress beyond.

The philosopher, Paul Crowther, tells us that “a work of art enables the self to move beyond and outside itself toward another object”—providing a reconciled relationship with the world; “it is the space between Self and Other, the metaxu, the rich between.”[1] It is this space—this between—where we discover Lockridge’s true subject; it is the space, itself. For in it she finds reconciliation in all its forms; most notably though with her own, small world.

The space can dwarf us; it can make us feel so insignificant—so trivial. Or worse, it can prompt us to consider the emptiness, devoid of signs. We might walk away considering nihilism or a hopelessness rooted in our own smallness: our quaint dwellings swallowed up or unconsidered by the grandness of the infinite. This is the tension in her paintings—irrelevance, but looking closer it isn’t the sky that imposes this message rather it is the earth-brown homes firmly grounded and lost in the soils that they rest upon which forces us to consider the Biblical message “from dust to dust”. The giant mouthed sky 2/3 of each painting is not the threat, it is earth-boundedness which paws at each of us to make us its own.

The sky on the other hand, is richly textured with washes of paint: sometimes with clouds rising like steeples other times like panels of stained glass interacting with the delicateness of light. There exists a serenity in them that smacks not of emptiness but presence. If it is not seen at first it is because the presence itself seems allusive at times, but allusive because of its pervasiveness—the way something that is always around seems to disappear or at least becomes unnoticed simply due to its ubiquity. Alexander Schmemann writes:

All that exist is God’s gift to man, and it all exists to make God known to man, to make man’s life communion with God. It is divine love made food, made life for man. God blesses everything He creates, and, in biblical language, this means that He makes all creation the sign and means of His presence and wisdom, love and revelation.[2]

The largeness of the sky and its ubiquity do threaten but not the human element in the image; rather it threatens the earth-boundedness. Meaning trumps irrelevance in her paintings

And this is what Lockridge is hinting at: the home as sanctuary; a place where God is felt, communed with and made known; significance and meaning; a scene simple, straight-forward, and everyday that points back to God—providing value. It is always there but often our views need re-orientation. All the cosmos is a sanctuary from the most grand to the most banal if the lens is turned just so. Lockridge turns the lens to redeem her little insignificant patches of soil—what she calls “nostalgia…leaky windows and dirty sidewalks, the loud neighbors and pungent curry simmering next door.” A lens turned horizontal makes these just nostalgia with no greater purpose, but Lockridge sees God in everything and wants us to re-orient our lenses to move “beyond and outside” with her to see “His presence and wisdom, love and revelation” in nothing but the leaky windows and pungent curry sauce of the everyday: the divine food in the unexceptional.


[1]Daniel Siedell, God in the Gallery: A Christian Embrace of Modern Art (Grand Rapids Michigan: Baker Academic Press, 2008), 27.

 

[2]Alexander Schmemann, For the Life of the World: Sacraments and Orthodoxy (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2000), 14.

2 Comments

  1. [...] in our home to remind us of where we’ve been.  (Christmas gift for next year?) Check out the review of this [...]

  2. [...] our house to remind us of where we’ve been.  (Christmas gift for next year?) Check out the review of this series.  Another example of this is a more recent painting of a Memphis cityscape  that I [...]

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Request for Help

You may be aware of our recent affiliation with InternationalArtsMovement (IAM).  IAM is a global community of artists and creative catalysts—people who take an active part in engaging with the arts and believe that the arts play a vital role in human flourishing. This community was founded over 20 years ago by painter, author & philosopher MakotoFujimura. We are excited about this affiliation.

In February 2012, IAM is holding a small, by-invitation-only gathering for catalysts in the “art/faith/humanity” spheres gathering throughout the world, and the Continuum has been invited to join this gathering. We have elected to send Kent Smith as our representative. For three (cold!) days, he and others will be gathering in IAM’s gallery in midtown Manhattan and meeting with the staff of International Arts Movement. This will be a vital time for us to build our relationships with one another in the movement, to learn more about the future of the movement, to contribute our input, ideas, experiences, and expertise to the shape of the movement, and to be more deeply equipped and resourced as we receive information on the programs and resources IAM produces.

IAM has raised funding for two nights of housing and three days of meals, but we have to cover Kent’s travel costs to NYC. I am writing to see if you would be willing to help underwrite the $500 in travel costs to attend this important gathering.

As IAM is a 501(c)3 non-profit arts organization, any donations made are tax-deductible. If you would like to support Kent & the Continuum’s participation, you may do it one of two ways:

  1. Mail a check made payable to International Arts Movement, 38 W. 39th St, 3rd FL, New York, NY 10018. Include a note that your gift is to be applied toward the “2012 IAM Catalysts Summit” and include Kent’s name (Kent Smith).
  2. Make an online donation. Click here and enter your donation amount under “General Donation.” Once you click “Add to Cart,” you will be able to leave a “note,” where you may designate “2012 IAM Catalysts Summit” and include Kent’s name.

IAM will reimburse Kent’s travel expenses based on donations received. (Any gifts beyond his travel costs will be used to support this regional gathering and the movement as a whole.)

This opportunity is something that will add tremendous value to our work on behalf of artists and the arts, and I am grateful the Continuum will be a part of it. Your donation will really help make that possible.

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