"In Search of the Deeper
Meaning,"
New York Times
Sunday, September 21, 1986
by Helen A. Harrison
In many cultures, art is closely linked
to religious and social practice and the artist's role is to celebrate
the significance of those beliefs and customs. In American society,
however, where individual initiative has replaced collective responsibility
and faith is more often a matter of personal conscience than of communal
acceptance, the material aspects of art - its style, its size, its
price tag - have come to dominate our perception of its meaning and
value.
Yet there are still numerous artists whose work reflects the ancient impulse
to communicate on a spiritual level. To do so in a relevant way they must reconcile
the reality of modern life with their desire to invest art with a deeper, more
profound and more universal meaning.
" Myths and Rituals for the 21st Century," the current exhibition
at the Islip Art Museum, examines this trend in a variety of forms, from individual
art objects to installations created especially for this occasion, and performances,
either actual or documented. This project, perhaps the most complex and challenging
so far in the museum's consistently provocative program of
contemporary shows, demonstrate the affirmative, life-enhancing role
some artists have chosen as an alternative to both materialism and
alienation.
Symbols play an important part in each artist's personal repertory of imagery,
yet none are so arcane as to be inaccessible to the viewer. In fact, if their
imagery did not strike some chord of recognition beyond the bounds of the
artist's own psyche they would be out of touch with the very spiritual energy
they seek to tap. The pieces relating to ritual are at once the most compelling
and the most conceptual, because although the rituals involve human action,
interaction and reaction, what we see in the gallery are for the most
part records of past events...
... Alex Grey's performance pieces involve more overly narrative symbolism.
In "Burnt Offering," for example, fragments
of
religious texts were burned and the ashes mingled to unify divergent
beliefs via the all-consuming medium of fire. This and other
performances are documented in color photos with explanatory captions.
Mr. Grey's paintings, as detailed and anatomically accurate as medical illustrations,
present man as an archetypal being struggling toward cosmic unity. In his large
triptych, "Journey of the Wounded Healer," a male figure, exiled
from distant earth, literally explodes in the vacuum of space.
To achieve renewal,
he travels along the evolutionary spiral to be reincarnated as a benevolent
healer, emanating rays of enlightenment. Mr Grey's vision of a flawed but
perfectible mankind stands as an antidote to the cynicism and spiritual
malaise prevalent in much of contemporary art...
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