Autumn 2004 |
THE ARCHIVE |
Issue #14 |
The Journal of the Leslie/Lohman Gay Art Foundation |
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Susan
Synarski Susan
Synarski
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You
Do The Metaphors: Bay
Area painter Susan Synarski, b. 1956, Westover AFB, Chicopee MA, began
her formal art education at Eastern New Mexico University-"out
on the plains, you could spit to Texas from there. It was all churches
and peanut farms." She completed her BA in 1982 at CSU, Sacramento,
where she studied with Oliver Jackson and Joan Moment. The artist later
entered the graduate program at San Francisco State University, studied
with Robert Bechtel, Paul Pratchenko and Cheri Raciti and received her
MFA in 1991. She now resides in Oakland, CA. Growing up Synarski
moved numerous times: Plattsburg, NY, Macon, GA, Roswell, NM, Minot,
ND, Mesa, AZ, etc. before graduating high school in Albuquerque, NM,
and developed the military brat's sense of displaced and detached rootlessness
as well as a cosmopolite's voyeurism and the anthropological sense of
the outsider. Achieving her graduate
degree at the height of the frenzied New York art boom, she shunned
the circus typified by Mark Kostabi and high performance art, and chose
to pursue the craft of painting in a quieter and more personal exploration.
Her early work was in large-scale acrylic canvasses characterized by
a figural style pared to basic elements and an energetic use of color,
pattern and line influenced by Philip Guston. In early works such
as El Paso in which a sombre menacing geometric figure appears
to monitor a desolate landscape the major themes of Synarski's work
began to emerge: exclusion/inclusion, the imposition of arbitrary systems
and surveillance. They are difficult paintings, deceptive in their cartoon-like
presentation, an element of style the artist parlayed into a successful
career as a commercial illustrator in the 1990s working for Rolling
Stone, Out, The New Yorker and other magazines. But even in this
work and her illustrations for books like Booty: Girl Pirates on
the High Seas Synarski has never been able to fully shrug off the
adult themes at hand and there is an undeniable political dimension
in her choice of illustration work which is both feminist and gender-bending. But it is the more
personal work using elements of this visual style and infusing them
with sly ironies and taut metaphors that has come to identify the artist.
She paints a universe of expectations but also one in which expectation
is thwarted. The well-oiled machines of society have gone awry-a mower
mowing through flowerbeds. Often there are backgrounds of polluted landscapes
and references to walkie-talkies, microphones, transmitters, or radio
signals. We see the suggestion of technologies that enable predation
of the self and of one's privacy by society and media. In The Party's
Over a pink voyeuristic figure in a heated gloomy landscape stands
beside a black wedding cake topped by a television bride and groom.
In Square Green an Argus-eyed green figure smokes in a night-lit
alley, a broken window behind him, a microphone suspended above. This
painting suggests mood without defining it, like the world of film noir
with its moral ambiguities, double crosses, private detectives and urban
nightscapes. It is as though night is a last refuge of the hunted. Synarski's recent
work, tiny gouaches on paper reminiscent of Indian miniature painting,
incorporate her use of humor and metaphor in iconic, boldly-colored
personal geometries mindful of a spiritual arcanum. This includes a
recent series of god figures like Volcano in which a fire-haired
magma figure emerges from a lava field matches in hand, ciggy in mouth,
poised yet ready to explode and Abominable Snowman wherein another
multi-armed earth god holds blocks of ice while sitting yogi-like above
a terrain from which the frozen foot of a lost climber protrudes. Though
some of these works are no are larger than playing cards, none of the
monumentality of the artists earlier, larger pieces is lost because
of their careful composition and superb composition. These recent works
are a superb introduction to an artist whose work has evolved and honed
its greater themes even as her paintings have continued to diminish
in size. This is an artist whose metaphors of hunted, haunted alienation
describe a discombobulated universe, mindful of the amok society we
have accreted. This is an artist in mid-career whose importance has
only begun to be appreciated.
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