For a lighter and more categorically summery Santa Barbara Museum of Art encounter than the subtle, enigmatic survey of James Castle’s dusky spit and soot drawings, proceed to the smaller Emmons Gallery and bask in the colorful, sly-witted fare to be found in the exhibition WARES! Extraordinary Ceramics and the Ordinary Home. Here, elements of pop art’s fusion of high and low culture and carbonated irreverence meet in the realm of contemporary/modern ceramic art, a medium still deserving more love in the fine-art world.
Highlights in this mix include both emerging artists and such groundbreaking luminaries as Viola Frey, Robert Arneson, and Ojai’s own beloved Beatrice Wood (1893–1998). Wood’s small, genially grotesque autobiographical figurines, like wedding cake cameos, allude to her husband-by-convenience Steve Hoag and friend and confidant Helen Freeman, as a lopsided, lippy nude.
Arneson’s playful and decidedly pop-artful 1963 piece “Case of Bottles” counterbalances the reality of a single mass-produced soda bottle (7Up, the truth be told) with a motley crew of gruffly fashioned ceramic facsimiles. Art imitates marketplace reality, crudely, and trumps the commercial commodity subject.
In the large centerpiece of the exhibition, Frey’s wild and whimsical “Homage to Dubuffet” (1977–80), a larger-and-funnier-than-life coupling of a tall, fauvist-colored woman facing off with a mangled beast of the sort that “Art Brut” master Jean Dubuffet might have created. It’s an art historical in-joke, in which beauty meets beast and eras and attitudes do a wobbly dance.
By contrast, Gifford Myers’s deceptively soft-spoken piece “Holding On/Holding Out” toys with perception of scale, for commentary’s sake. A tiny, all-American suburban home is seen dwarfed by looming monolithic black walls, symbols of faceless urban encroachment.
From the younger set of ceramic artists, the selection includes two previously not shown on gallery walls, Woody De Othello’s “underneath the surface changes occur that we cannot bear witness to,” and Seth Bogart’s “Cheeks.”
Bringing into the arena of fine art the everyday — the “ordinary home” aspect of the exhibition title’s equation — is an objective for Stephanie Shih, whose realistic renderings of items, edible and otherwise, from Asian-American grocery stores deal with ethnic and commodity-related themes, while also simply pleasing our sense of texture and design.
In his own different way, Bogart’s purposefully funky representations of elite perfumery vessels makes for a friendly yet subversive reversal scheme at hand, and at play. Speaking of which, play of an enlightened sort, is a general MO in this show, best enjoyed with a fizzy mind/eye.
WARES! Extraordinary Ceramics and the Ordinary Home is on view at Santa Barbara Museum of Art through September 17. See sbma.net.
For additional insights on the SBMA exhibit WARES! Extraordinary Ceramics and the Ordinary Home, the museum is offering two special events:
Thursday, August 17, 5 p.m.
Don’t Be So Serious: In Conversation with Seth Bogart
Seth Bogart is an artist of many trades: pop ceramicist, punk frontman, owner, and designer of Wacky Wacko streetwear. In conversation with WARES! Extraordinary Ceramics and the Ordinary Home (on view through September 17) curator Lauren Karazija, Bogart discusses his distinctively playful and irreverent practice in the production of art, music, and clothing.
Location: SBMA’s Mary Craig Auditorium, 1130 State Street, Santa Barbara
Free SBMA Members, Students, and UCSB Faculty/$5 Non-Members
Get tickets at tickets.sbma.net
Saturday, August 19, 10 – 11:30 a.m.
Pop-Up Clay Play with Seth Bogart
Join WARES! exhibition artist Seth Bogart for a casual conversation, hands-on demo, and unique opportunity to create with clay and cardboard. Pinch, roll, repurpose, twist, glue, and build with the help from Museum Teaching Artists, and explore how the ordinary can be elevated. Dress for mess.
Location: SBMA’s Family Resource Center, 1130 State Street, Santa Barbara
Ages 18 and over
Free (Reservation required)
Reserve at spot at tickets.sbma.net.