HANDS ON
Printmaker Has A Unique Way With The Human Form
by Michael Sims
NASHVILLE SCENE - 2/17/00
It's interesting how many different
influences help turn a budding artist toward a career, or at least
help reduce the number of distractions littering the way. Unpredictable
factors include family background, health, economics, and the
mysterious urges of personality. For example, Ron Adams remembers
that his dislike of winter was one of the reasons he was attracted
to art at an early age. "I was born in Michigan and lived
there as a very young kid. And I never did get much into ice skating
and that sort of thing. I'd much rather stay close to the heater,
doing a little drawing or something like that."
Now in his mid 60's, Adams is the
subject of the current exhibition at the Vanderbilt University
Fine Arts Gallery, "Ron Adams: Master Printmaker." Organized
by guest curator James Rutherford, the show includes 29 works
of art: 14 prints by Adams, one of his paintings, and 14 works
he printed by other artists. "I actually got into the arts
field as a kid, mimicking my father," Adams explains. "He
wasn't a trained artist at all, but he was always pretty handy
with his hands, did a lot of drawing, sometimes picked up extra
work as a sign painter and that sort of thing. I think I primarily
started out by just copying things out of the newspaper, the comic
strips, whatever."
Adams' parents knew he wanted to
become an artist. Not surprisingly , they assumed he couldn't
make a living at it, so they encouraged him to find a practical
career. In his late teens, Adams moved to California and got a
nightjob in a post office, where a coworker happened to be studying
technical illustration. Adams enrolled to do the same, and soon
he was hired to do technical illustration for Hughes Aircraft.
In time, he enrolled in an art school and studied painting, sculpture,
and printmaking. Having long since achieved the status of master
printer, he has worked in Los Angeles, at Gemini G.E.L.; in San
Francisco, at Editions Press; and more recently in Santa Fe, N.M.,
as owner and director of his own press, Hand Graphics. Although
he began exhibiting in 1966, he retired only a few years ago to
devote himself to his own work.
Adams' technical background is apparent
in his work--in its expertise, precision, and attention to detail.
While well-composed and richly textured, these prints rely upon
drawing skills. At the same time, the artist's decades of printmaking
have taught him the virtues and limitations of etching, lithography,
and other media. This knowledge lends each work a perfection of
technique that makes its medium seem the inevitable choice for
the subject. The shading of the lithographs is as nicely done
as the detailed etchings.
Yet for all the skill and detail
in Adams' work, there is a disquieting surreal aspect as well.
Adams is constantly aware of the muscles and tendons underlying
the surface of the body. This knowledge, combined with his stylized
treatment of shadows and surface irregularities, creates a unique
view of the human form. Most of his figures are clothed, but their
shoulder bones show through their jackets and their calves bulge
inside their pants legs. These details give even his most static
figures a kind of vigor reminiscent of Michelangelo's robust sibyls.
Consider the beautiful print "Neptune
Washington," one of three works in the show that appear in
two different versions. A barefoot man in striped overalls stands
on a flat-bottom boat, which he is poling down a river. He thoughtfully
gazes ahead and upward, ignoring the rain that creates splendid
ripples on the surface of the river. At his feet is an exquisite
Japanese vignette: a bucketful of catfish and other catches, a
bait can, and an unex plained frog. "One of my main objectives"
Adams said "is to bringlife, character, and personality to
an inanimate surface that still maintains its own presence among
animate objects."
But inevitably the animate figures
dominate the scene. In art as in life, our eyes seek our own kind.
At first glance, the everyday paraphernalia in "Neptune Washington"
lead the eye to expect a more "realistic," less stylized
work. Yet the figure is anything but merely representational.
The corded veins in his hands, the shockingly superimposed rib
cage, the elegant skin flaring into
gigantic feet - all these details unite into a grandeur that also
conveys a disturbing sense of our vulnerable, mortal bodies.
As befits an artist and artisan
who was first inspired by his father's handiness, Adams is preoccupied
with the human hand. Famously difficult to draw, the hand as a
subject doesn't frighten Ron Adams. Not only does he emphasize
the big, burly hands of his figures; sometimes he even draws them
foreshortened. The hands of the fisherman in "Neptune Washington,"
grasping the pole with which he navigates downstream, are fine
enough to stand alone, disembodied ied like Durer's and Rembrandt's
sketches of hands.
Another subject runs through several
of the prints: birds. In the engraving "Endangered Species
ll" a man holds a shovel upright in the American Gothic pose.
Meanwhile, a crow, holding a thorny rose in its beak, unfolds
its talons as it prepares to land on his head. In "Aunt Hattie,"
the woman's graceful neck and bunned hair are offset by the dark
bird that stands on her shoulder. It appears gentler than the
bird in "Endangered Species Il" but for all its dove-like
shape, it has the fierce beak of a crow. A larger, more impressive
etching portrays a woman crawling across an Oriental rug while
an elegantly drawn rooster stands on her shoulder, crowing.
This last work exhibits Adams' most
disturbing distortions of the human form. He has orchestrated
dramatic tension by composing the scene around sharp angles--the
exposed triangle of the rug, the triangle of wooden boards illuminated
by a light, the angled lines of the wallpaper. The scene is as
elegantly drawn as anything in the show. However, into this sophisticated
scene Adams places the jarring image of a woman who seems half
grace and and half disintegration. Her cadaverous shin and calf
are quit beautiful, but they link in a bloated thigh and a swollen
foot. Her abdomen is a mass of globes, and her typically Adamsian
rib cage shows.
"My concern," Adams says,
"is with capturing emotion and expression, rather than trying
to obtain realistic representation." Most of the time, as
these few examples demonstrate, he manages to do both.