The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Santa Claus and Shakespear­e collide in Drennen’s solo show

- By Felicia Feaster For the AJC

Artist Craig Drennen gives the schlock treatment to high art in his quirky, conceptual­ly challengin­g solo show “Bandit” at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia.

“Bandit” essentiall­y operates on two levels. On one hand, it is a deconstruc­tion of one of William Shakespear­e’s (reputedly working with a literary collaborat­or) lesser-known works, “Timon of Athens,” a kind of Elvis story of a wealthy Athenian who squanders his fortune on corrupt hangers-on. Atlanta-based Drennen’s choice of that play is strategic. Because there is so little cultural familiarit­y with “Timon of Athens,” Drennen can essentiall­y “own” the imagery and ideas around the play.

But “Timon of Athens” is just one feature of “Bandit.” On another level, and just in time for Christmas, “Bandit” is an excoriatio­n of the massive outlays of cash that define capitalism’s signature holiday, Christmas.

Consumptio­n, as exemplifie­d by Christmas, is the common ground between Shakespear­e’s Timon, a wealthy man who gives endlessly without much satisfacti­on, and Santa Claus, whose very modus operandi is the giving business. The dollar sign painted on canvases and bags of money placed on shelves beneath those paintings appear throughout “Bandit,” echoing the play’s theme. It’s as if Drennen is saying if Christmas can be reduced to a base consumer spectacle, why not Shakespear­e?

As an exhibition, “Bandit” reads as a sort of stage set for what might be an avant-garde performanc­e of “Timon of Athens” staged with a Christmas theme. There is a fake brick chimney “Chimney Hole 1” hung very high on the gallery wall, suggesting Santa might drop by at any second, and tiny artificial Christmas trees listlessly draped with measly strands of tinsel that sit on round daises that read as coins or Shakespear­e’s

Globe Theatre in the round.

In addition, three lifesized gray Santa Clauses with the “X”’ed out eyes that convey death in cartoon terms lie on the gallery floor. Overhead, a video features shots of Santa repeating his signature refrain in the most exhausted, breathless terms imaginable, “ho, ho, ho” and “hee, hee, hee.” One of the high

points of the show, that video’s hilarious combinatio­n of “cheer” and exhaustion may pretty well sum up the American approach to Christmas, a frenzy of anticipato­ry excitement and post-traumatic despair measured in the arrival of January credit card bills.

To this mix, Drennen adds a series of paintings that bubble up some of the

themes of the show, decorated with dollar signs, more tinsel trees, peppermint candies, hyper-realist jingle bells, Santa Claus and big globs of white paint to signal snow. To some of those paintings, Drennen has added trompe l’oeil round mirrors like the kind hosting surveillan­ce cameras in elevators. Reflected inside those mirrors we see a man, assumedly the artist, taking a photo of his own painting. In this and many other ways, Drennen plays impishly with perspectiv­e, making us both surveyors and the surveyed as we take in his paintings. Continuall­y playing with our vantage, paintings can be read head-on in the usual way, or overhead, in a God’seye view suggested by the tinsel trees jutting from the wall next to Drennen’s paintings.

As if Santa and Shakespear­e weren’t enough, Drennen tackles the whole modernist ball of wax of what painting means and the tension between representa­tion and abstractio­n.

The show’s primary flaw is its inscrutabi­lity: Viewers will need to spend some quality alone time with Drennen’s show and work hard to make the connection­s. “Bandit” is very much an intellectu­al and also a formal enterprise steeped in ideas about painting, culture and consumptio­n. Whether Drennen’s show will get you in the Christmas spirit or send you into a funk is yet to be determined.

 ??  ?? Artist Craig Drennen’s solo show “Bandit” features this sculpture in cast plastic, acrylic and custom suits, “Bandits.”
Artist Craig Drennen’s solo show “Bandit” features this sculpture in cast plastic, acrylic and custom suits, “Bandits.”
 ??  ?? Craig Drennen’s painting “Bandit 4” is featured at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia.
Craig Drennen’s painting “Bandit 4” is featured at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art of Georgia.

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