LUCID
DREAMING
by Beth Elaine Wilson
Building,
Dwelling, Thinking ...and Painting
Language is the house of Being. Man dwells in this house. Those
who think and those who create poetry are the custodians of the dwelling.
Martin Heidegger
Years ago, when I was an over-stimulated, fresh young graduate student,
I got into an argument with my old college roommate. Shed gotten
interested in doing some artwork on her own, and was involved with the
popular genre of fantasy imagesyou know, unicorns, Celtic goddesses,
semi-psychedelic stuff. And of course I, with my new-found knowledge
of critical theory and cutting edge cultural analysis, found myself
criticizing her for not properly engaging the real issues
facing artthe problem of representation, the multifarious
issues raised by late capitalism and consumer commodity culture, and
so on.

The Changing Cynthia Dill: (top) History Rains,
collage and drawing; and 3-10-01, oil on panel
Needless to say, she didnt appreciate the condescension. (Sorry,
MJ!) Over the years, I like to think that Ive managed to digest
the insights that first inspired me in graduate school, and to bring
them to bear on my everyday experience of reality in a fuller sense,
to understand how they reflect (and impact upon) the material basis
of daily life. When ascending to the ethereal heights of philosophical
abstraction, it is all too possible to become caught up in ones
own cleverness, to the detriment of the experience that is presumably
the object of the philosophizing in the first place. (This phenomenon
was admirably skewered by Jonathan Swift in the Laputan section of Gullivers
Travels, describing a race of philosophers who literally live in the
sky, and who construct for Gulliver an ill-fitting suit tailored on
the basis of a single measurement of his height, the remainder of the
dimensions calculated on paper with Rule and Compasses.
He takes small comfort, however, in the fact that such accidents
[were] very frequent, and little regarded.)
The perceived gap between the intellectual and the real, between thought
and feeling, creates all sorts of difficulties with respect to art and
artmaking. Teaching in art schools helps to reinforce the distance between
what one feels and what one knows. Talking recently with one local artist,
Cynthia Dill, has brought this problem to my attention once againas
well as an awareness of my own apparent complicity in its production.
Dill received her MFA in painting from SUNY New Paltz a few years ago.
I met her when she asked if I would work with her as her professor on
an independent study project, because she wanted an introduction to
the major themes of contemporary critical theory. So we set off on the
path together, reading and discussing the major points of Lyotard, Derrida,
Baudrillard, Benjamin, Heidegger, and the rest. The dedication and adeptness
with which she tackled all this impressed meand were also qualities
that struck me in her painting, when I finally saw it. Dill, ever the
artist, processed this new mass of information through her work, which
shifted from a painterly, abstract style heavily influenced by Abstract
Expressionism, toward a more eclectic approach that integrated photographic
images, collaged into the work to address broader cultural issues such
as the mass consumption of media made possible through mechanical reproduction.
Even so, the work never completely cut its ties to the material worldin
one series, the silkscreens appeared on sheets of steel, bringing together
the weightlessness of the photographic image with the dense materiality
of its base in a deeply creative dialectic.
I was thus a bit surprised then, to see the invitation card for Dills
solo show at the Muroff-Kotler Gallery at Ulster Community College.
A loosely handled landscape, the painting features a familiar old industrial
building from the Rondout neighborhood in Kingstonone of those
places you know youve seen or driven past a thousand times, but
never really stopped to look at. The painting is small, just 8 by 10
inches, and utterly, irreducibly representational. No artiness, no references
to photography, or to Baudrillard for that matter. So what was going
on here?
Its been a totally intuitive year, she informed me
when we finally talked. Due to a number of close, and in some cases
unexpected personal losses, Dill found herself turning away from what
she calls all that MFA stuff, the intellectual brainwashing, going
around in circles looking for answers and control in favor of
a return to family, to her connections with people and places. She felt
the need to let go of one to get to the other, exploring
the world by means of feeling and intuition rather than intellect and
analysis. This is exactly the sort of turn that would have gotten her
in hot water while she was in school, where she would have been criticized
for turning her art into mere therapy.
Its interesting that she feels the need to qualify the work shes
produced in this year in such terms. She apologized for being totally
inarticulate about the paintings, but in a sense, thats
exactly what this body of work is all abouta year of reflection
on an emotional level, applying her talents and attention in almost
total solitude, in order to find a way to reconcile death and love,
rupture and healing. And she has applied herself primarily to the issue
of place, memorializing in paint local venues that now speak volumes
about themselves, and the people and community connections (and disconnections)
they represent. Essentially, Dill has conducted an aesthetic quest for
the very things that many of us find ourselves doing in the rest of
our lives, since September 11. Asking her about the now all-too-appropriate
mood of these introspective works, she allowed that shed spent
a year in that emotional state already, and it seems that now everybody
else has just caught up with her. I find myself fascinated with this
twist of fate: Imagine what we would have had to say about these paintings
if these past weeks had never happened. Would they have simply struck
me as therapy in the negative sense then? And knowing that
disasters happen to individual people everydaycar crashes, affairs,
flunking out of school, cancer diagnoses, what have youhow is
it that this particular media event (not to mention the anthrax aftermath)
has gripped our collective psyche in such a way as to make any of these
personal traumas seem so much less important?
I know she isnt ready to push it in this direction (and perhaps
Im doing some violence by even suggesting it), but perhaps the
next step for Dill is to start working out the algebra of these relationships
between personal loss and communal catastrophe, and the ways in which
art can help us understand representationand ourselvesin
a deeper, richer way.
2000-2001 Close to Home, paintings by Cynthia
Dill, through November 9 at the Muroff Kotler Visual Arts Gallery, Ulster
County Community College, Stone Ridge. 687-5113.
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