The Columbus Dispatch

‘Land’ exhibit features king-size artwork by five CCAD alumni

- Nancy Gilson

For the exhibit “Land” at the Columbus College of Art & Design, five alumni of the college decided to go big.

From a king-size mural, to a trampoline, and a 37-foot-long carved tree limb from an Ohio farm, the artists make striking and imposing use of CCAD’S spacious Beeler Gallery.

As for the exhibit title, said Faculty Director of Galleries and exhibit curator Tim Rietenbach, the word “land” encompasse­s broad meanings.

“There are a few convention­al landscapes but it’s more about the flexibilit­y of that word,” Rietenbach said.

That the works aren’t obviously connected to a theme doesn’t matter. Each piece has an intriguing backstory, and all are vivid and arresting.

Kurt Lightner, a 1993 graduate who works from his studio in Queens, New York, spent 15 years carving a large tree limb from his family farm in Troy, Ohio. Using script from his great-great-grandfathe­r’s farm journals, Lightner meticulous­ly entered notes about planting and harvesting crops over the seasons in small letters up and down the numerous branches. The piece, titled “Work,” is a marvel of engineerin­g as well as a marvel to behold.

Lightner also has two big, colorful landscapes of tropical-like trees and scenes of migrant farm workers hunched over in fields as they pick — identified as people only by their plaid shirts.

In a small room across from Lightner’s tree limb is the appropriat­ely placed “Trees (Please),” one of two short videos by artist Kate Rhoades, a 2010 graduate who lives in Oakland, California. In both this work and her kaleidosco­pic-like “Incantatio­ns Against Fascism,” Rhoades uses her own voice as sound narration.

Delaware, Ohio, artist Ed Valentine (CCAD, 1991) has a series of large splatter-and-drip paintings of birds, all created with chalkboard paint, acrylic, enamel, spray paint and crayon on canvas. The birds are static, presented in color and spotlighte­d against charcoalgr­ay background­s.

The exhibit’s largest mural is “Connection and/or Separation” by New York artist Bing Lee (CCAD, 1977), a 45-by-16foot mural that occupies an entire wall of the gallery. Against a green background are about 10 different cartoon and calligraph­y-like characters drawn in gold and black. Maybe one is an elephant and maybe another one is a bird. But they all coexist in this cheerful, animated mural punctuated by big dots of blue, black and yellow paint.

Not to be dwarfed in the same room is “Holding Pattern” by Erin Mckenna (CCAD, 2012) of Ypsilanti, Michigan. Her enormous, black-frame trampoline (12-foot circle) is propped at an angle. The bounce mat is covered with multicolor­ed fabric panels, some of them creating a spiral pattern. Looking at it might give a viewer the same sort of dizziness of an actual trampoline experience.

Rietenbach has nicely positioned these inventive works so that if they don’t have a lot in common as far as the notion of “land” goes, they speak forcefully on their own and cohabit in friendly fashion with one another. Viewers will enjoy this energetic exhibit by CCAD graduates of different generation­s.

negilson@gmail.com

 ?? COLUMBUS COLLEGE OF ART & DESIGN TY WRIGHT PHOTOS/ ?? “Holding Pattern” by Erin Mckenna is a 12-foot trampoline.
COLUMBUS COLLEGE OF ART & DESIGN TY WRIGHT PHOTOS/ “Holding Pattern” by Erin Mckenna is a 12-foot trampoline.
 ?? ?? Kurt Lightner spend 15 years carving “Work,” a tree limb from his family farm.
Kurt Lightner spend 15 years carving “Work,” a tree limb from his family farm.

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