Persistent Schlock Deficit Haunts 2014 Dallas Art Fair

Schlock-off: Smith (right) vs. Kim (left)
Schlock-off: Smith (right) vs. Kim (left)

Located in the fair’s “schlock loop,” Turner Carroll gallery’s entry into the “top schlock”  category was Shawn Smith’s digital porcupine, but it didn’t stand a chance against neighboring Byung-Jin Kim’s truly terrible People-Love at neighboring Gamo Gallery.

The Dallas Art Fair is always notably deficient in this kind of typical art-fair schlock, but this year was the most extreme yet: a half-dozen quality galleries crowded out all but a few holdout schlockmongers, even in the fair’s back corridor.

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Marjorie Schwarz, Untitleds

Dutton, for example, with its one-person focus on Marjorie Schwarz‘s curiously slow, obscure paintings was a highlight of the fair.  If this trend continues, next year there’ll be nothing left to ridicule.

Jennifer Jackson Hutchins, Foot, 2007
Jennifer Jackson Hutchins, Foot, 2007

I love lumps, and Jessica Jackson Hutchins’ Foot (2007), was half the reason The Green Gallery was my favorite booth, the other half being Milwaukee stalwart Nick Frank‘s three curious, thoughtful mini-gestural abstractions.

There was an interesting spate of new, modest abstract painting at this year’s fair, mostly more indirect than Frank’s: artists like Schwarz who scrape, layer and slather canvases the size of their computer monitors, with varying degrees of success. Portable and less expensive, these works have quietly supplanted a fair number of large colorful paintings at the fair, but are easy to overlook in the hurly-burly.

Nick Frank at The Green Gallery
Nick Frank at The Green Gallery
The Green Gallery
The Green Gallery

Michelle Grabner and Brad Killam’s industrial merry-go-round wasn’t bad, either.

At Cris Worley, I was happy to see Texas metal-casting guru Harry Geffert’s chainmail screen of bronze saltine crackers. Geffert’s strength is in quirky bronze comedy, but I’ve seen too much reverent nature worship from him lately.

Harry Geffert
Harry Geffert

Ro2 Art’s booth was refreshingly maximal- trying for a restrained white-cube experience when your white cube is jammed in next to a hundred others is like meditating in a bus terminal.

Ro2 Art
Ro2 Art

Likewise the other Dallas two-letter gallery, RE, crammed their booth with toy-like mini-art (some specially-made for the fair) from a stable of Dallas up-and-comers, summarizing recent shows at Dallas alternative venues by Peter Ligon, Travis LaMothe, Eli Walker, and Justin Hunter Allen.

RE Gallery
RE Gallery, foreground Benjamin Terry then Samantha McCurdy. Back wall: Justin Hunter Allen

Barnaby Fitzgerald’s Bocca (2013) at Valley House is the painting equivalent of macaroni and cheese; comforting but not challenging. I swear I heard this painting emit a quiet, unformed “moo,” as I approached. These days, when so many seemingly straightforward works have gimmicks attached, you never know. I stood in front of it for five minutes waiting for it to moo again before I decided the painting was far more interesting if didn’t know.

Barnaby Fitzgerald, Bocca
Barnaby Fitzgerald, Bocca

Scott Reeder’s pasta and spraypaint pieces at Lisa Cooley were indeed “post good.” Lighthearted and witty, they perfectly matched throw-away technique with throw-away ideas and punch lines. Go paint one for yourself.

Scott Reeder
Scott Reeder

 

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