(Continued from Jan. 13)
I spend a lot of time at Malcolm Fraser’s “The Soul Escaping
Death” painting flanked by a framed spread of many medals earned in World War
1. He served in the French Blue Devils unit and was wounded five times. He also
was an officer with the Red Cross on the frontlines.
Chris wanders off. She knows that I may be awhile.
That’s what you do at a museum, right? Wander. Or roll,
depending on your mobility.
If you look up Fraser at New York City’s Salmagundi Club web
site, you find that Fraser was a member. I had to search for him and the screen
listed 56 items in the file. But the link does not go to the artwork but you can
see some in person at the Ormond Memorial Art Museum & Gardens, 78 E. Granada, Blvd. The Salmagundi club is dedicated to
representational art so it’s natural that it drew Fraser who painted portraits
of the living and the dead, angels, soldiers, and John the Baptist among them.
“The Soul Escaping Death” shows a dead soldier on the ground
in front of blasted battlements. He is wrapped in a U.S. flag that he
apparently was carrying on the staff he grips in his dead hands. An angel has
one hand on the body and another on a robe stripped from what’s supposed to be the
soldier’s soul rising into the gilded heavens. The spirit looks free and happy,
the vestments looking as if they are morphing into angel’s wings. The soul’s
naked body looks female with long curly hair and the possibility of breasts and
any genitals hidden under a triangle of pubic hair. It could be that this is
Fraser’s vision of the angelic form, one that is human but intersexual, one
that represents a brand-new being that we become after death. The exposed flesh
of the dead soldier and the angel is rough and brown as if they were connected
to the ground like old oak trees. The soul’s flesh is the pink of life, a
representation of new life in the soul.
I looked at this painting a long time. I couldn’t decide if
it was a work of hope in the face of death or a memoir of an artist who has
witnessed slaughter on a grand scale. He was awarded both the Croix de Guerre
and the Verdun Medal. “Verdun” was symbolic of the war for the French, a battle
cry and also a memory of defeat. Verdun was the longest battle of the war,
lasting 11 months. Casualties were enormous for the French and Germans, with
700,000 dead, missing, and wounded. The site’s towering Douaumont Ossuary contains
the bones of more than 100,000 soldiers never identified, French and German dead intermingled.
You can view them through little windows.
Fraser was an accomplished artist. Not sure he took many
risks. The 20th century was about to explode and the explosion was
captured by poets and writers. The so-called “Lost Generation” gave us exciting
and troubling masterpieces.
Charles Humes Jr. is a living artist from Miami who has much
in common with this creative breed. Humes lives in the present and creates in
the present. As an African-American, he has an endless array of subjects, many
taken from daily newspapers. Lest we miss his messages, he uses newspaper
clippings in his mixed media work. The
museum’s handout for the new year shows Humes’ “Gentrified” on the cover.
“Gentrified” is a loaded word in the black community. It
often means that a black neighborhood is being turned over to developers and
the mostly-white gentry who will inhabit the condos/townhouses that will
replace independent businesses. Artists figure in
this, too. They often are the first to occupy rundown urban neighborhoods
because they can afford them. Then the city (I’m looking at you, Denver) becomes
known as an arts hub and young people swarm in and then smart developers who
saw this coming and bought rundown buildings kick out the artists and renovate
them into condos and before long you have ranks of techies wandering the
streets looking for art for their walls by artists who once lived in their
building but now can only afford the prairie exurbs or some quaint rural
village in the foothills that soon will swarm with newcomers seeking real
estate in artsy quaint rural villages.
It's not the fault of artists. Hey, I just wanted a place
to paint! It’s life in America. Not sure what it’s going to look like in
Trumplandia.
Oh yes I do. I truly do.
Humes’ work will be on exhibit through Feb. 9. Next up are Colombian
sculptor Felipe Lopez and collage artist Staci Swider. Accord to the handout: “Her
[Swinder’s] work is a meditation on aging, memory, and the unseen forces that
guide us.” Sounds intriguing and timely. Opening reception at the museum gallery is Feb.
20, 6-8 p.m.