Storm Tharp "We Appeal to Heaven" at PDX Contemporary Art
There is something terribly unnerving about Storm Tharp's latest batch of drawings. A kind of double-edged unnerving; grotesque in it's own right, and also unsettling because of your own reaction too it. These figures which bring to mind equal parts Francis Bacon and Modigliani, J. K. Huysmans and Dennis Cooper, are bleeding, dissolving, mutating. And yet each grotesquerie is executed so beautifully, and contributes so seemlessly to the work's atmosphere, that they inspire awe rather than horror. But what exactly are the terms of these figurative ruptures and excesses? Skin: traditionally painting is the perfect medium to capture the fleshy essence, and naked skin the proof of an artist's technical chops, hence the classical nudes. Fast forward to Kiki Smith's sculptural rhyming of handmade paper and the frail boundary of skin that marks the distinction between inside and outside. One might imagine, in Tharp's compositions, that this fragile layer has been ripped away, and we are left with a volatile interaction between what was formerly internal and external. The glue that holds figuration together has dissolved, and we are left with something much more interesting. Each work has multiple registers: passages rendered in painstaking detail (that doesn't FEEL painstaking), seemingly spontaneous artmarks, rigid abstractions, confident gestural contours, and richly modulated planes of color. The artist slips in and out of each method as easily as he switches mediums, using watercolor, pencil, ink, and paint with confidence and purpose. And yet there is a palpable tension to each work: the passages rendered the most exactly draw in your gaze, threatening both spatially and temporally to exceed their bounds. The most spontaneous-seeming marks are employed so specifically that one marvels at the artist's foresight and control. It as if Tharp has harnessed the forces of entropy inherent to artmaking, but the outcome of this mastery is recalcitrant and threatening. Because each portrait is not merely a passive subject, the armature upon which the artist might exhibit his craft; rather each creature seems to demand a specific handling, to pose different problems, to smugly challenge the artist, to tease the viewer. In "Einstein," pretty colors and soft renderings of cloth and hair frames the mushroom-cloud bacteria of the inky flesh, producing a tension which presents a stable whole that is constantly at war with itself. In "The Ex-King," the fine details of the figure's dress shirt and bloom wrapped about it's neck overwhelm the attention of the viewer, as the splotchy blooms of the face and hand are inexplicably contained by the invisible bounds of the background. Recalling Tharp's sculpture at the recent biennial, a tumerous growth blossoms from the head of the figure, though he seems nonplussed. "Rare Bird" seems to be slipping farther and father into abstraction, as her torso becomes a biomorphic blob, and her necklace seems to want to be geometry more than jewelry. So why the appeal to heaven? Tharp inhabits the paradigm of artist-as-creator uneasily; equal parts hostile and utterly enamoured with his creations, who in turn are perfectly capable of formulating their own existential stances from their chaotic armature of paint, pencil, ink, of figuration and abstraction, of realism and expressionism. They are untouched by the mortal questions of skin and blood, unconcerned that they have been wiped away and smudged, made host to any number of unnatural growths; instead they each add a voice to the chorus: "we die conceptually."
