| Cover Story | Plant Life | Northwest Living | Taste | Now & Then |
WRITTEN BY SHEILA FARR |
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| BURLESQUE&BLACKHUMOR An X-ray view of reality from the artist as wise fool |
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Some people peg Martin as a cartoonist or outsider artist; but when he started his career, in the 1950s and '60s, his work hung alongside that of the top painters of the day in shows at the Seattle Art Museum. "Mysticism" was the buzzword in the region's art circles, and Martin (like so many others) fell under the influence of Northwest School painters like Mark Tobey, Morris Graves and Guy Anderson. He also played fast and loose with images he stole from European painters such as Chagall, Picasso and Van Gogh. Sometimes Martin - who grew up in Ballard and moved to Edmonds in the mid-1960s - would copy and transform the work of his partner, Helen Reynolds, a commercial photographer who shot portraits of Martin in his various guises. The two lived together until Reynolds' death in 1995.
Putting together a book on Martin was an uphill battle, a feat of detective work and perseverance. Of all the artists I know, Martin is the least concerned with keeping records. When I met him in the mid-1990s, he had no slides, no bibliography, no résumé to speak of. He had few records of the many collectors who own his work. For those, and a dozen other reasons, he has turned into the region's most under-appreciated artist. It's my hope that the book, excerpted below, will do something to remedy that.
Art Rustler at the Rivoli
EVEN THOUGH European modernism plays a big role in James Martin's work and the painters of the Northwest School inspire him, the real source of his mature style, which began to emerge in the 1970s, traces back to his days at Ballard High School. Martin learned the basics of drawing, printmaking and design in the classroom, but trained his eye bumming around on his own, away from school. Some days, he would cut class with a buddy and head downtown to the Rivoli Theatre on First Avenue to watch the burlesque shows. "I used to sit up front and look at those torn and dirty costumes," he recalls. "Even the women had costumes that were torn and dirty; and they all had red hair, even the clown. Some of them were hookers, I think. We were just voyeurs."
If Martin's style looks casual and cartoonish, it's because that's what he aims for. Humor is catharsis. But he chooses his images with a sophisticated eye and a poet's ability to extract the essential material from every scene he encounters. He finds Andy Warhol as a person more fascinating than some of the pictures he made. "People always try to understand him through the Campbell's Soup cans," Martin says. "What about the other aspects? They don't say, like Ultra Violet (Warhol's sidekick) did, that he had a snap implanted on his forehead to keep the wigs on."
Wherever Martin looks, he finds absurdity, so why not take it a step further? "I try to think of things that I haven't seen or heard," he says. "I think, `Now this would be interesting for people to see.' It's kind of like growing plants and making a hybrid - a crossbreed!" That's a perfect description of what Martin did in the late 1960s and early 1970s when he began reshaping famous art historical images. It was a big shift from his early stylistic mimicking. Now Martin had found a manner of painting that was recognizably his own and was setting out - much like Don Quixote - on a virtual quest: a search for the holy grail of art.
Martin has never tried to create a natural perspective, but rather a sense of the uncanny way events and images bunch up together in memory and imagination. Often, he paints his people with their noses pressed up against the picture plane, confronting us like the cluster of shades that met Odysseus at the mouth of the underworld.
When Martin began his career, he imitated other artists' palettes as well as their styles. He could do the razzle-dazzle of Paul Klee; he could do the Northwest gloom of Mark Tobey. In the late 1960s, to please Helen, who loved flowers, Martin began to use color as a gift, painting luscious bouquets for her. But by the 1980s, he had caught on that color is more than beauty or personal style - it has meaning, too - so that by the 1990s, Martin had at his fingertips a juicy vocabulary of color. It stands out in paintings like "Fruitwood Ceiling," in which he uses color to speak volumes when his imagery is at its most minimal. The gaping dresser drawer, the empty basin, the oval void of the mirror, when enveloped in pink and rusty red, upset the innocent image of a young girl's room and suggest instead a defloration. "Painting is like theater," Martin says. "You can create a story, a scene. Sometimes you can even create a dialogue."
AT SOME POINT fairly early in his career, Martin abandoned the urge for technical finesse to the immediacy of emotional response, not because he doesn't admire superb technique, but because it doesn't suit who he is and what he has to say. He is still conflicted over how his ingrained blue-collar work ethic and the artistic marketplace fit together. "That's the Gordian knot," he admitted recently.
Unlike other creative people I know, Martin never appears to suffer from blocks or anxiety about producing. The tap is always running. I attribute this to the fact that he adamantly refuses to participate in the business aspect of his career. He just can't handle it. "We all go through the stage of worrying about money," Martin says. "But I've never wanted more than the necessities - food and shelter. As the culture changes, luxuries become necessities: a car, for example, or a phone. It has to do with the life you choose to lead and your destiny. If you're worried about debt, you're robbing yourself of the time to do something else. I'm selfish with my time."
Martin leaves his imagination free to flit among absurdities and profundities, which seem - at least in his Edmonds neighborhood - to travel together in flocks. This, I think, stirs up the addictive substance that's been commented on in Martin paintings: Each one seems so amazing, it makes a little buzz in your brain - you think you just have to have it. Then you see the next one, and it's more remarkable still. If you pass it up, you know you'll be thinking of nothing else. Martin may not have the focused concentration, the intense discipline to achieve the kind of heroic greatness of the artists he most admires. But what he has instead is the hit-and-run sagacity of a Shakespearean fool - a character who often enough steals the show.
Martin's work transmits an X-ray view of the forms and workings of this world - not necessarily the bones and muscles, but the soul. That ability to see and experience on an extraordinary level, without prejudice - whether it's the sagging curves of a hag or the silken smile of Mona Lisa, the pure pleasure of making art or the shock of a friend's murder - is the thing that defines an artist. Martin has it in spades. Whatever he has relinquished in worldly success seems trivial compared to that unrestrained vision. Sheila Farr is arts critic for The Seattle Times, a poet and the author of books on artists Fay Jones and Leo Kenney. Paintings were photographed by Spike Mafford. |
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| Cover Story | Plant Life | Northwest Living | Taste | Now & Then |