June Wayne Exhibition
Captures Her Inventive, Influential Spirit ART Review
by William Wilson... Times Art Critic
Pure light and space became a serious aesthetic vehicle
in '60's Southern California. Such phenomenon-based
art flowered here in the work of chaps like Larry Bell
and Robert Irwin, but they had artistic ancestors. Painter
John McLaughlin is frequently noted. Another less obvious
precursor is June Wayne At 80, she's something of a
phenomenon herself.
Her work is reviewed at the Los Angeles County Museum
of Art in "June Wayne: A Retrospective." About
time, too. Rarely seen in her adopted hometown, this
cultural trailblazer has achieved more than this artistic
accolade.
In the '40's she fought a City Hall that thought modern
art was a Commie plot. In 1960, she founded and directed
the nonprofit Tamarind Lithography Workshop. It literally
save an endangered are form. She was wife, mother and
general family care-giver, while actively championing
feminist aims, inspiring such kindred younger spirits
as Judy Chicago.
Wayne is like a Renaissance figure reincarnated as
a scrappy Depression-era Chicago school drop-out fending
off wise guys while reading John Donne. The exhibition
shows her no-guff human side best in "The Dorothy
Series," a portfolio of graphic-nostalgia-style
prints dedicated to her mother. Its least typical but
most mordant image is a Pop-literal picture of a brassiere
titled "Power Net." It takes on greater resonance
knowing Wayne's divorced mother was a traveling saleswoman
of wares then called "foundation garments."
Wayne's opus reveals an artist with an almost problematic
range of skills and stylistic virtuosity. A 1957 watercolor
self-portrait combines the slightly fin de siecle poetry
of James Ensor with adamantly flawless technique.
This machined perfection is Wayne's most consistent
hallmark. It puts one in mind of optical trickster like
Victor Vasarely. By contrast, however, Wayne is a humanist.
Her '40s-era biomorphic Surrealist variations on artists
like Mutta and Miro contradict their spooky, ectoplasmic
figures with personages that look like lathered metal.
Not that she couldn't do them flat, as in "Kafka
Symbols, Second Variation." She can do anything.
Anything, that is, except make endearing, cuddly art.
The best expressive vectors of her aesthetic are power,
mystery and-properly employed-sardonic humor. Her "The
Ladder" looks like Hieronymus Bosch satirizing
a now-debunked Darwinian notion that humans are the
top species.
Wayne's perfectionist style drew considerably more
recognition for the '60's "Finish Fetish"
art of Billy Al Bengston and his mates at the Ferus
Gallery than for herself. Translating techniques similar
to Wayne's into macho hot-rod and surfer subculture
icons, the boys profoundly irritated female artists
who were actually related spirits.
The difference between Wayne and the Ferus studs were
probably less a question of gender than generation.
While they applied industrial techniques to Pop culture,
Wayne retained the expressive vehicles of high culture-drawing,
painting, printmaking, tapestry and sculptural relief.
A print such as Wayne's 1973 "Time Visa"
seems to mark a chronological crossroads. A hugely enlarged
fingerprint floats like an egg-shaped planet in a galactic
void. At a distance, its colors look like candy-apple
metal flake. Such work stakes her prior claim to art
developed by younger talent.
Wayne's subsequent work simply elbows its way into
the hippie generation. Her series in metal leaf on gesso
and shallow styrene reliefs can be related to Mary Corse's
light-reflective compositions. A question inevitably
arises about whether Wayne was playing catch-up or legitimately
extended her own sensibility. The answer wafts from
her late '40's work. Long-standing interests in physics
and natural science dew her to imagery of galactic vortexes
such as "The Tunnel." Combining fingerprint
and void results in an ongoing rumination on the interchangeability
of microcosm and macrocosm-a concept less hackneyed
when pictured than when spoken.
In these parts, preoccupation with natural forces comes
with the territory. Wayne's recurrent series on great
orgasmic waves are, I think, her way of translating
Abstract Expressionism back into the phenomenal environment.
"Tenth Wave" is a particularly striking example
of the artist's Leonardo-esque mentality. An apocalyptic
tidal wave simultaneously suggests the mushroom cloud
of nuclear explosion, the Rorschach blot of psychological
subjectivity and-intriguingly-the notion of art made
less by human effort than by calculated chemical reaction.
Finally, however, it seems to me that basing Wayne's
distinction solely on a contribution to subsequent L.A.
are misses the point. After all. L.A.'s environment
did more to form Light and Space than she did. Wayne's
uniqueness lies precisely in her departures. She offers
a fruitful alternative model for the artist. Never allowing
a signature style to imprison her, like a creative scientist
she investigates her ideals and passions even when they
lead her out of the studio. She does more than make
superior art in Los Angeles. She helped mold its larger
culture.
The exhibition was organized by Lucinda H. Gedeon for
the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase College, State
University of New York and coordinated here by LACMA
curator Victor Carlso. |