Photos courtesy of 101/exhibit

For Wynwood’s Second Saturday, I made my way up to the Design District to check out San Francisco based artist Joshua Hagler’s first solo show at 101/exhibit, properly named, ‘Perceptions of Religious Imagery in Natural Phenomena.’ Freshly settled back in the States from his 6 month residency at MIRA in Martignano, Italy; one can see the direct influences this residency had on him. Pulling from his personal Christian upbringing, obscure Catholic Churches he explored in Italy and the classical baroque interiors of those spaces, Hagler fuses these references into something wonderful. I’d like to take you on a personal tour and urge you to go & visit this exhibit that’s on view till November 26th.

Walking into the main room, your first view is ‘I was being tempted regularly…’ a collision of figures and classical Caravaggio-like angels exploding, or perhaps about to implode. Either way, it’s a sense of the actual fragment in time in which this event is really happening, or so it feels. At first glance, I notice his playful nature with smearing and symmetry. In fact, many of his works share these features. At first all I could think of was the use of a digital sketch. Like, “oh great, another artist ‘Photo-chopping’ a collage and just painting it out.” But it’s not, especially after I got to pick his brain on this issue. He utilizes digital software’s as a tool and he doesn’t lean or depend on them to produce his works. I was so glad to hear that. It didn’t matter though, his absolute control over the medium and exquisite grasp of composition melted away those thoughts.

At any rate, if you just release your eyeballs into his paintings, I assure you that they’ll have an adventure. I found myself lost, in a refreshing way, between the lathery dollops of paint and the jolts of color atop the muted wastelands that served as backdrops. I could really see motion in his works, as if I could see him moving about the canvas while creating them.

Photos courtesy of 101/exhibit

The  next pieces in the exhibit are two large panels, displaying a zooming train with figures participating in a ‘roller durby-mosh-pit-race-o-rama’ event. (Yes, I have to include all of that so you can picture this)! Falling from the heavens are skydivers and once again, you can just feel the hyper activity in these paintings. Appropriately hung next to each other, I wonder if this is another religious inspired practice, like making a modern diptych that is trying to be didactic to its viewer. I’m not 100% on its lesson, so to say, but that’s what they channel to me. None the less, I like the double perspective because adds even more depth.

Photos courtesy of 101/exhibit

The last large panel in the main room is my personal favorite, ‘The Mind Recedes…’! I I love the carnage and desolate landscape filled with a Dalí-like swirling of paint, like a message to be decoded. I’m picking up a lot of sexual energies in this one, borderline pornographic. Mmm, sex, death and gore… sounds like a great movie! I noticed the comic hero Spiderman, lying on his back, ripped apart, muddled atop a garden of dead meat chunks. On top of Mr. Parker, is a 3D rendered head, painted on canvas, cut out and mounted on the final painting. Perhaps it’s like skin touching skin, since this 3D headed figure seems to be ‘necromancing’ Spiderman. You can clearly see the figure has a firefighter jacket on. May be it’s one real hero injecting faith into another fictional hero? I can’t say for sure, but I’d like to believe it! Overall, this work is intense, gory, comical and de-licious!

Photos courtesy of 101/exhibit

In the second room of the gallery space, there’s a different batch of ‘faith’ inspired works that seamlessly ties into the main room. Hagler mentions that they are earlier works, before the residency. You can clearly see his thought processes and complete evolution in everything combined here. I feel a more playful side of the artist in this room. More cartoon characters to perhaps give light-heartedness to the scenario’s Joshua depicts to the viewer. In relation with religious influences, one can reference faith, dedication, sacrifice, and saviors. I noticed more and more firefighters (and I want to say coast guard figures) in these paintings. They are all depicted in the act of saving a life. Perhaps overall, it’s the recognition of everyday hero’s or civilian saviors that sacrifice themselves, selflessly… for us. On the surface, each panel is a lathered concoction of color exploding from a monochrome world, fluid movement and a warped sense of humor to give you a smirk. I’d rate this show as 100% delicious. And lets just say that my eyeballs are still creamy from last night’s excitement. Bravo!