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![]() Three Painters And Three Solo Shows Cover A Very Wide Arc By Margaret Regan DANIEL MARTIN DIAZ tortures the all-too-human bodies of his saints, piercing, poking, beheading and otherwise mutilating them in dark paintings hemmed in by shrine-like Gothic frames.
And Katie Cooper, well, bodies are not her first concern. She leans mostly toward triangles, fish, teacups and keys floating on broadly painted backgrounds. But then she adds some fine-looking drawings of hands and legs as grace notes.
A young Tucsonan who paints in his kitchen, Diaz has immersed himself with bloody authenticity in the laceration school of religious art. His truncated limbs, bleeding flesh and splintered skulls come straight out of the religious art of Spain, Mexico and the Southwest, both from the rough retablo paintings of popular culture and the more refined martyrs of official church art. Touched here and there with an impassive Byzantine melancholy, spiced up by surrealism and contemporary despair, at their best Diaz's medieval saints seem born of a surprisingly modern vision. His big solo show, Ars Moriendi--23 works in oil, six linoleum block prints--reveals an obsessive artist with a sometimes searing vision. His dark works depict the most gruesome events of the traditional Christian martyrology and then some. Saint Sebastian is the brave young Christian who died a slow death by arrows. In typical Christian art he's seen erotically as a nearly naked young man, pierced but still beautiful. Sebastian's sensuous torso is still there in Diaz's deliciously painted version, but that's about all that's there: His head and limbs have been lopped off. In "Premonition of Mary," another variant on a traditional subject, Diaz suspends the troubled Madonna from a sharp meat hook. Below her is her Baby Jesus, also aloft. His brow--and the canvas--have been pierced by two real-life nails.
These empty spaces are curiously modern. Delineated only by the flat planes of walls and floor, they draw on an art of alienation with roots as deep as Hopper and as wide as Balthus. They posit the death of faith itself, not just of the unfortunate martyr in question in each work. In "Hanging from the Gallows," one of the best, and most disquieting, of Diaz's works, a dead saint swings upside down, his hands and feet bound with rope. His halo still tenaciously clings to his lifeless skull, but the man's presumed saintliness has not saved him from the extinction that is every human's fate. No such dark meditations trouble Inzalaco's bright paintings. Some 40 works--paintings in oil, paintings on paper, charcoal drawings--have spilled out into the restored WomanKraft gallery like lush fruits out of a prodigious cornucopia. Everywhere is lovely female flesh, from the yellow and lavender hips of the "Beautiful Mnasidice," Inzalaco's slightly fauvist version of Goya's "Maja," to the ripe peach breasts of the recumbent "Inspiratress" and the tangled limbs of the sated women in "Duo."
In contrast to the emotional, crowded pictures of Diaz and Inzalaco, Cooper's pictures at Raw seem almost vacant. Their lonely shapes drift across paint fields that have the uninteresting look of commercial airbrushing. But it may just be a case of the imagery not being ready for primetime or the big canvas. Cooper's small monoprints, each one putting a single object front and center, are far more compelling. A lock and key, a light bulb, glowing green or yellow, leave their lowly origins behind and become majestic, or darn near. Ars Moriendi, a show of works by Daniel Martin Diaz, continues through October 15 at the Temple Gallery in the Temple of Music and Art, 330 S. Scott Ave. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Friday, and before theatre performances and during intermissions. For more information call 624-7370. Visible for a Change, an exhibition of works by Lorraine Inzalaco, continues through October 29 at WomanKraft, 388 S. Stone Ave. Gallery hours are 1 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday, and from 7 to 10 p.m. on the first Saturday of every month. There will be a reception from 7 to 10 p.m. on Saturday, October 4. For more information call 629-9976.
Katie Cooper: Recent Works, Paintings and Prints continues
through October 11 at Raw Gallery, 43 S. Sixth Ave. Gallery hours
are 1 to 5 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, until 7 p.m. Thursdays
7 to 10 p.m. on Downtown Saturday Nights. For more information
call 882-6927.
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