Saturday, August 4, 2007
The Visionary Art of Dov Gertzweig
From California Folklife Website
By Stephen Higa
I have come to consider ‘New Age’ art as the latest addition to
the rich corpus of self-taught visionary art, which includes the work of such
luminaries as Sister Gertrude Morgan and the Shaker sister Polly Collins.
Like all visionary artists, New Age artists construct alternative worlds detached
from yet intrinsic to our own. These worlds are homiletic worlds, created
to instruct, admonish, and enrich the world of the mundane; in no way, therefore,
are we to imagine these worlds as merely autistic fantasies created for the
artist’s own delectation. Although the worlds created by New Age visionaries
are often incomprehensible to those on the outside, their images must nonetheless
be read as texts, as visionary literature meant to communicate truths thought
worthy of universal comprehension.
Gary “Dov” Gertzweig of Southern California is one such New Age
artist. Born in North Hollywood, Gertzweig recalls how a visit to Yosemite
in his youth awakened the environmental consciousness that would come to permeate
his work. Initially trained as a musician, he has found outlet in the visual
arts as well, in murals and "cosmic paintings;" thus, to Gertzweig,
art and song seem to spring from the same visionary impulse, much as they
did to Sister Gertrude Morgan and the Shakers.
Indeed, this intertwining of art and song seems to imbue his paintings with
a distinct rhythm, but it is neither as frenetic and feverish as in the work
of Ody Saban nor as jubilant as that of Sister Gertrude Morgan, two other
self-taught visionaries Gertzweig's work recalls. Instead, his paintings seem
to shimmer with the pulsing electricity that trickles through the veins of
living plants. It is no wonder, then, that he imbues his paintings with heavy
doses of vibrant greens and shimmering blues.
Gertzweig incorporates realistically rendered animals, archetypal human figures,
swirling stylized plants, and the ubiquitous deep blues of sea and sky into
his teeming compositions. He plants these Edens with botanical forms evoking
redwoods, coast live oaks, and tropical plants, recalling California’s
native landscapes and the exotic pastiche of the luxurious SoCal gardens all
around him. Perhaps in response to the expansive views off the California
coastline where sky and sea become one, the air and water in Gertzweig’s
paintings often flow into each other, creating an uneasy sense of horizon
loss and collapsed perspective. This results in works that are simultaneously
flat and vast, as if the viewer is gazing in upon the moment of Creation.
Asserts Gertzweig: “art can make a moment become eternal.”
Out of Southern California’s brown and brittle chaparral and L.A.’s
smog and congestion, Gertzweig has created an alternative world filled with
gardens of green, living things and sparkling air and water. Where tired urban
postmoderns isolate themselves, trudge, and kvetch, the beings in Gertzweig’s
world are radiant and harmonious. “Imagine our world,” the dolphins
of the Astral Ocean told him, “where there are no possessions, no countries,
abundance and no greed. This is our gift, our consciousness, and we wish to
share it with you.”
Gertzweig’s response to his Southern California homeland, therefore,
is the same as that of every other visionary artist dissatisfied with sin
or vice in their communities. Where the Shakers recorded the whisperings of
angels and spirits and Sister Gertrude Morgan captured visions of the New
Jerusalem, Gertzweig has here created an alternative world that seeks to demonstrate
both how our own world was and the way it could be. Collapsing perspective,
time, and place into images of concentrated meaning, Gertzweig has created
potent yet seemingly innocuous polemics against the political, social, and
biological status quo.
(Image: "Cosmic Egg." Dov Gertzweig, begun 1990)
Posted by Stephen Higa at 11:14 PM Wednesday, August 1, 2007
http://califolk.blogspot.com/search?updated-min=2007-01-01T00%3A00%3A00-08%3A00&updated-max=2008-01-01T00%3A00%3A00-08%3A00&max-results=10