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ART REVIEW PLEIN-AIR PAINTER JOHN COMERS WORK IS A CUT ABOVE THE CROWDED LOCAL ART SCENE It is common knowledge that Santa
Barbara and the outlying environs are home to, and also the frequent
subject of, a sizable population of painters. Many are competent
and affectionate surveyors of the celebrated landscape and townscape
here. Few, though, are able to transcend what amounts to a positive
type of visual noise, and the inevitable banks of clichés
lurking around the business of pretty landscape picture-making.
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Other calm corners of Santa Barbaran
life include the humbly rustic and affecting small painting Barn,
Sedgwick Preserve and Surfer at Refugio. The
latter includes a rare human presence in Comers work, but
is viewed from an almost voyeuristic distance. The surfer is
almost more a compositional prop and a metaphorical ploy, as
a transitional element between human activity and natural forces.
Pleasant and just slightly tart surprises slip into the easygoing exhibition, as well, most notably in the painting of the Micheltorena overpass (actually painted before the renovation of that bridge, making this a historical document as well as a cool painting). Here, the idea of the angular photographers eye and a more urban sensibility come into play in a painting with an offbeat subject and point of view. But it also remains true to the heart of Comers mission by taking heed of the lush mountain periphery which so dramatically frames the Santa Barbara experience for artists and the rest of us who care to pay attention. Among his self-admitted influences, Comer counts Ray Strong, the influential plein-air painter presently being courted for work now continuing into his 100th year. Certainly, the passionate twin embrace of nature and painting bond the two. Digging deeper into history, Comer also points and logically to the influence of the great 19th-century French landscape painter Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot. Beyond simply making pretty pictures that register with the tourist crowd, some trans-historical lineage is taking place with Comers art. He continues a timehonored practice of finding the resonance between the preciousness and wonder of nature and the act of painting. |
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