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Tom Duncan
G.W. Einstein
Summer 1992
Reviews
That Tom
Duncan's wall-mounted assemblages and larger,
freestanding polychrome dioramas of found objects and materials
resemble altar panels and reliquaries is appropriate, considering
their function - to teach and preserve important events in the
artist's life by means of both symbol and narrative. At first
glance, these busy scenes, populated by tiny figures, animals,
buildings, and landscapes, recall the folk-art subgenre known as
"memory painting," yet a closer look reveals that, instead of gentle
reminiscence.
Duncan's project is nothing less than an intense
reimaging of his life, in which traumatic events are reexperienced
and mastered via a kind of fantastic, additive alchemy. Dedicated to
exorcising the artist's peril-filled childhood in Scotland during
World War II and addressing his subsequent escapades in postwar
America, these works are unapologetically narcissistic, and therein
lies their charm.
The Brandy Straffing, 1991, vividly recreates an attack on
the young Duncan
and his mother by German pilots. Replete with guardian angels
hovering over the victims and devils flying over the Nazi planes,
this scene is surrounded by a layer of earth, gas masks, and other
cryptic symbols that evoke the protective environment of a bomb
shelter. The artist's guardian angel (presented as an adolescent
self-portrait with wings) is an omnipotent alter ego,
shamanistically reinserted into this memory and others to render
them harmless.
The work in progress Dedicated to Coney Island, 1984-, is a massive,
minutely detailed replica of the famous amusement park, with its
boardwalk and beach represented as it appeared during its heyday. By
pushing buttons., one is able to set various rides in motion. This
and other non-war-related works are also dedicated to mastering
once-perceived threats to the artist: his ever-present guardian
angel hovers diligently over what must have been a terrifying scene
to a child. The Mercurochrome Kid III and IV (both 1988) belong to a
series of painted altar panels that chronicle one of Duncan's
childhood injuries and his subsequent, Christ-like immersion in a
protective bath of blood-red Mercurochrome. Little irony is evident
in this conflation of personal and religions history.
Duncan's
many years of art training prevent his miscategorizaiton as "naive."
His is a sophisticated synthesisi of sources that include religion,
history, fairy tales, comics, and art of the self-taught. Though the
latter influence is especially evident. Duncan's
sculptures lack the stilted, contrived look that often marks the
work of trained artists who draw from such sources. Duncan's
obsessive dedication to his personal vision suggests that he has one
foot firmly planted on the "outside."
- Jenifer
P. Borum
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