Los Angeles Times

There’s trouble ahead

- By Leah Ollman Track 16, 1206 Maple Ave. No. 1005, Wednesdays to Saturdays, through Feb. 1. (310) 815-8080, www.track16.com

We aren’t beauties, we humans. At least not on the inside, not always. Kathleen Henderson practices an excruciati­ng realism when it comes to our species. In 35 blistering recent drawings at Track 16, greed, pride and vanity play out in oil stick on paper — raw impulses matched by raw, urgent line.

Henderson, based in the Bay Area, hasn’t shown in L.A. for five years. Much has happened since then. In scene after tragicomic scene, Henderson registers the dismaying state of the union and the planet.

Two figures under an umbrella pose as if for a classic, nature-as-souvenir snapshot made comic by one woman’s awkward-sexy stance and made tragic by the green rain spit down from the clouds, the drops curdling into clots that litter the bare ground. In “Team Building With Rabbits,” a man wears nothing below the waist, jacket and tie above, and on his face a dumb grin of self-congratula­tion over the carcasses clutched in each hand.

Henderson toggles astutely between representi­ng concealmen­t and revelation, power and vulnerabil­ity; sometimes the conditions oppose each other, sometimes they reinforce.

Most of her subjects, for instance, are hooded, their heads reduced to lumpy white domes with clumsily cut-out eyes and mouths. But those overly simplified features read also as unguarded, brutally transparen­t expression­s. Henderson has referred to mummers’ costumes as a source of the hoods, but the cloth covering carries multiple and varied associatio­ns, from innocent Halloween ghost to devious criminal or torture victim. The drawings derive a distinctiv­e, searing energy from that constant oscillatio­n.

Henderson borrows not just from popular culture but also history and myth to render the tainted spirit of the here and now. A current favorite is the ancient Greek goddess Artemis of Ephesus, a protector of mothers, traditiona­lly portrayed with a chest barnacled by breasts. Henderson shows her naked, onstage, before a curtain drawn as if of streaked blood — again, strength and vulnerabil­ity uneasily fused. Many of the characters appear at microphone­s, engaging in some sort of public address, or posing with their conquests. Like good 21st century citizens, they are at once performing and exposing themselves, through the masking device of persona.

Are we doomed? Perhaps, perhaps not. But ridiculous creatures we most definitely are. Henderson allows for levity and also tenderness, even if skewed: A man kneels to kiss a dismayed ghost, outlined in red on the ground; the self-loving Narcissus is drawn as an earnest clown. Henderson’s work might be pared down, but it is sociologic­ally dense. Her palette of dilute pinks and greens verges on the sickly. Her line is insistent. Like the figures it circumscri­bes, it flaunts an innate lack of grace.

As with the mummers, her model too may be the Greek god Momus, who personifie­d mockery and blame, exercising an essential role as social critic. According to one of Aesop’s fables, Momus faulted the design of the human body for hiding the heart inside. It should be visible, he felt, the better to detect its corruption. Henderson too believes in exposing humankind’s base motivation­s — exploitati­on, domination — and does so brilliantl­y, whether stripping her characters or cloaking them.

 ?? Images from Track 16 ?? “KISS” by Kathleen Henderson evokes Narcissus, but the ref lection the subject so admires is seen in what seems shaped like a ghost.
Images from Track 16 “KISS” by Kathleen Henderson evokes Narcissus, but the ref lection the subject so admires is seen in what seems shaped like a ghost.
 ??  ?? “PINKIE” drops into a news conference. Henderson, a Bay Area artist, depicts most of her subjects in hoods, a masking device that she has compared to mummers’ costumes.
“PINKIE” drops into a news conference. Henderson, a Bay Area artist, depicts most of her subjects in hoods, a masking device that she has compared to mummers’ costumes.
 ??  ?? “GREEN RAIN” could be a cheery vacation photo if not for the acid spitting from the sky. Henderson’s drawings at Track 16 depict a planet and its population in peril.
“GREEN RAIN” could be a cheery vacation photo if not for the acid spitting from the sky. Henderson’s drawings at Track 16 depict a planet and its population in peril.

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