New
Exhibit
Icebox Gallery presents:
“Haunted by a Painter's Ghost”,
Black and white surrealistic photography by Dominic
Rouse.
Icebox Gallery presents
for the first time in Minnesota the work of Dominic Rouse. The exhibit
title “Haunted by a Painter’s Ghost” gives
a hint at what you will see. Rouse’s photographic images are
seamless photographic compositions filled with elaborate details
plucked from reality and reassembled into a surrealistic dreamscapes
rich in mystery. |
|
|
|
Opening during
Art-A-Whirl
on Saturday, May 17th, 2008.
Opening Reception:
8 PM – Midnight.
Continues through August 9th, 2008.
SEE THE SHOW
HERE
|
Life can be likened
to a movie that is shown only once to a captive audience of one in
a darkened room in which the level of illumination is a decision
for the occupant alone.
But even the widest prairies have electric fences and beyond the
wires leads me to blunder up against the wires whose muscle-shredding
violence knows no mercy.
The perfect prison is the one in which the inmates have been convinced
that really they are free. Society is such a confinement; the result
of a binding contract made unwittingly between government and governed.
I find myself attracted to neither camp.
The guardians of society are troubled by their own shallows; the
fears they have of others are the fears they have about themselves
cunningly repackaged to increase their market appeal.
|
|
The artist, on the
other hand, is unafraid of his depths and if you offer him the chance
to exchange the gift of his imagination for the mediocrity that passes
for happiness in the lives of most others he will not make the trade.
He will tell you that imagination is the instrument of self-knowledge.
The man of vision
is charged with the duty of exposing our many grievous faults and
failures, with dredging up to the light our dark and dangerous dreams
for the purpose of improvement; to see the light we must first acknowledge
that we are in the dark.
Work which displays most accurately the deepest recesses of the
human soul will, by default, display some rather unpleasant aspects
of it. It is not the duty of Art to be acceptable to polite society.
Wherever he goes, the artist will find himself a stranger as he is
the only legitimate citizen of the world which he inhabits. His lone,
dissenting voice is society’s surest line of defence against
its greatest enemy which is, of course, itself.
Were it not for the pain to be found in the wider world I might
not have sought sanctuary in the confinement of my own where I have
discovered an endless supply of the raw materials needed to make
the images I do.
Unless the truth
be sinful, it is not possible to find fault with a man who views
the world through a camera's lens though it is equally impossible
in any given age to create work which is agreeable to everyone. Art
often challenges existing assumptions rather than simply accommodating
them; it is beyond Good and Evil, which are not the antitheses, but
degrees of each other. |
|
I suspect that Evil may not exist at all, at least not in the form
in which it is presented to us, though there can be little closer
to it than the hypocrisies of men and women who claim goodness for
themselves. Morality is a disease peculiar to humans and at its worst
human life is not tragic but unmeaning.
I am not seeking approval, as a sense of worth should be independent
of the approbation of others. What I hope for is an acceptance of
that unique quality which is the province of every soul, the discovery
of which reveals that facet of creation reserved exclusively for
it alone.
Art is not made by men and women who are wise, but by those in search
of wisdom and to search at all is wisdom enough. Knowledge of oneself
is the most that we can know.
And saying so to some means nothing; others it leaves nothing to
be said.
- Dominic Rouse March 2007 |