Gary Monroe
Curated by Eleanor Heartney
April 27 –  June 3, 2006
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 27, 6-8pm

 

Gary Monroe was born in Enterprise, AL in 1956. He attended Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, KY from 1975-1978 and currently lives and works in his hometown of Knoxville, TN. In the eighties, Monroe was an active member of the 500X Gallery in Dallas, TX and frequently exhibited at various galleries and institutions in Texas. After several years as a predominately abstract artist and at mid-career, Monroe began a group of figurative drawings based on Southern narratives, of which the Appalachian Serpent Handlers became the focus. These large-scale drawings illustrate this unusual religious practice of a small number of Holiness churches in Southern Appalachia. Primarily based on classical works of Renaissance religious and mythological art, one can also notice abstract references in the likes of Jackson Pollock and Kasimir Malevich. One work, The Anointing of Miss Hopi, injects visual references of Native American Hopi Culture, which had a snake handling ritual early in the twentieth century. Monroe showed Serpent Handlers and Other Saints at the Tennessee Valley Unitarian Universalist Church, Knoxville, TN in 2002, and in 1999 he showed New Drawings at the Rodman Townsend Sr. Memorial Gallery in the Knoxville Museum of Art Annex. His work was also exhibited in the group show Thresholds: Expressions of Art & Spiritual Life curated by Eleanor Heartney which showed at The Green Hill Center for North Carolina Art in Greensboro, NC; The McColl Center for Visual Art in Charlotte, NC; Transylvania University in Lexington, KY in 2005; The State Museum of South Carolina in Columbia, SC and Owensboro Museum of Fine Art in Owensboro, KY in 2004 as well as City Museum of Charleston, SC in 2003. The exhibition at CUE will represent his first solo exhibition in New York.

 

 

Eleanor Heartney is a Contributing Editor to Art in America and Artpress and received the College Art Association's Frank Jewett Mather Award for distinction in art criticism in 1992. Her books include: Critical Condition: American Culture at the Crossroads, 1997; Postmodernism, 2001; Postmodern Heretics: The Catholic Imagination in Contemporary Art, 2004 and Defending Complexity: Art, Politics and the New World Order, 2006. Heartney is currently working on a survey of contemporary art from the 1980s to the present which will be published by Phaidon in 2007. Since 2003, she has been Co-President of AICA-USA, the American section of the International Art Critics Association.

 

 

Artist's Statement:

I planned to start out with one drawing in a planned group of Southern themed works; however these Serpent Handler drawings have occupied me for several years now. All are composed with images from Renaissance religious art. A few of the earlier drawings are fictitious narratives. The latter drawings are narratives based on actual individuals.

This is my first show in New York. I would like to thank the CUE Art Foundation and Eleanor Heartney for this opportunity.

 

 

Curator's Statement:

by Eleanor Heartney

"And these signs shall follow them that believe; in my name they shall cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover."
Mark 16:17

This short text at the end of the gospel of St. Mark forms the basis for the ritual practice of snake handling in rural Appalachia. Founded in the early 20th century by Tennessean George Went Hensley, snake handling is a variant of Pentecostal Christianity in which devotees "take up serpents", specifically rattlesnakes, in the course of ecstatic transports brought on during religious services. Their immunity from the snake's venom is a sign of God's favor. This practice, which strikes outsiders as both bizarre and willfully dangerous, serves practitioners as a means of affirming their faith in God and their submission to his will.

The practice of snake handling forms the point of departure for these remarkable works by Tennessee native Gary Monroe. Not himself a practitioner of these rituals, Monroe became aware of the serpent handlers during his childhood in the mountains of Tennessee. In his monumental drawings, he roots this exotic practice in a symbolic system which could not be more familiar to students of Western art history. His paintings meld the legends and famous personages of the snake handling tradition with quotations from the works of artists like Titian, Michelangelo, Rubens, Caravaggio and El Greco.

In Monroe's intricate, pulsing compositions, one can find references to snake related scenarios as depicted by the Old Masters. Among the recurring motifs in his works are figures adapted from the Sistine Chapel's representation of the story of the Brazen Serpent whom the Israelites were punished for worshiping in place of God. Other works quote from Michelangelo's depiction of the Expulsion of Adam and Eve from Eden following their encounter with the Satan in serpent guise. Monroe also makes frequent use of writhing figures from the Laocoon, the classical Greek sculpture which represents a father and two sons wrestling with deadly sea serpents unleashed by the god Poseidon. Such snake related motifs are intermingled with quotations from other well known Renaissance and Baroque era paintings, and with sly references to more contemporary sources. In several works one can glimpse Malevich's constructivist cross, the faces of Picasso and Jackson Pollock or even a quotation from the Pollock painting The Deep.

But if these works pay homage to the figurative traditions of Western art, they also are steeped in the lore of the snake handlers. Some of the works commemorate specific individuals. For instance, The Death of Sister Melinda Brown of Parotsville, TN draws on Renaissance representations of the death and assumption of the Virgin to depict the death and subsequent apotheosis of a practitioner who died of a serpent bite after refusing medical care. The Vision of Free Pentecostal Sherman Lawson of Path Fork, KY blends elements from El Greco's version of Laocoon with dancing figures whose poses echo those of Matisse's dancers and suggest the ecstatic vision of one of the movement's founders. More ominously, The Assault of Sister Glenda Darlene Collins of Scottsboro, AL quotes from Rubens Rape of the Daughters of Leucippus to tell the true story of a member of the sect who attempted to kill his wife by forcing her to thrust her hand into a box full of venomous serpents.

In these drawings, Monroe mixes modern and traditional elements-figures in the same drawing may be wearing contemporary clothes and garments familiar from Old Master depictions of the biblical era. Sometimes bits of architecture or landscape echo renaissance painting, while in other works they are based on the vistas and dwellings of modern day Appalachia. This hybridity adds to the deliberate artifice of the works. Unlike more journalistic presentations of snake handling, Monroe's drawings present a spiritual practice filtered through the whole history of western art. We are reminded of the enduring power of religious belief and the unusual forms that worship can take. We are also made aware that the search for religious transport may bring both pleasure and pain. Blurring the line between art and religion, Monroe reminds us that both hold out the promise of spiritual transcendence, and both may cost their practitioners more than they expected.

 

 

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