Eugene Weekly : Visual Art : 5.8.08

Fields, Lines and Layers
New work by John Jay Cruson at White Lotus
BY CHUCK ADAMS

Vista 4
Vista 16

Some paint in fields, some paint in lines and some paint in layers. The Renaissance jack-of-all-trades Leonardo da Vinci painted using the sfumato technique, subtly overlaying numerous layers of translucent pigments to create a borderless tableau where each color blended into the next. This technique worked best in da Vinci’s backgrounds, where he blended various amounts of blue pigment to the faraway hills to give them what essayist Rebecca Solnit describes as “the blue of distance.” For John Jay Cruson, whose new landscape paintings hang this month at White Lotus Gallery, the focus is on perspective, not distance, and his technique is to paint in fields, lines and layers.

Cruson, a former art instructor at OSU and UO, knows his subject matter well, having grown up in the agricultural hills of Northern California. After a similar show of landscapes at White Lotus in 2004, Cruson’s new paintings return to his fascination with the open spaces of Eastern Oregon. His titling is simpler this time, with the subject either a Vista or Farmland, and his textures are beefed up. Shadows reveal depth to orchards, subtle brush strokes denote a grassy hillock, rows of alfalfa, a field of poppies or endless wheatfields.

Vista #16 offers a zoom-lens perspective on a dusty and demarcated landscape. The effect flattens the canvas in a near Post-Impressionist sense (Cruson is just a few blurry brushstrokes away from being a Cézanne copy-cat) but gives just enough of a hint that a horizon exists — somewhere — out there. Other paintings, like Vista #4, give such ruler straight horizon lines as to be unbelievable.

Cruson’s work here is similar to the photography of Andreas Gursky in its tricky manipulation of line and vantage point. Some works feel like snapshots taken from the highest hill in the vicinity. Others feel as if they’re looking down from a hot air balloon or, for cheaters, scrolling through Google Earth. Perhaps this airy feeling is what Cruson means when he writes in his artist statement that he “feels a sense of freedom” while designing his canvasses.

Rather than painting en plein air, Cruson does quick sketches in the field to evoke the curvilinear shapes and then retreats to his studio for the actual painting. His sketchbook is available to view at White Lotus, and I suggest checking it out.

But what about the subject matter? How can Cruson make the plain valleys and hills of Eastern Oregon interesting to the viewer who has a distaste for scenery? Those viewers can find in these paintings a sly commentary on humankind’s footprint on the earth. Farmland #19 presents the most rigorously cultivated landscape, complete with manmade lakes, dike roads and rows of orchards. In fact the scene is so surreal I can almost see it as a screenshot from a video game, such are its unnatural curvatures and roadside trees and shrubs.

This is art about agriculture, about the human need to cut down trees and grow crops and delineate fields and roads, marking territory on a passive landscape. People often witness such human footprints and recoil in disgust. Cruson sees beyond this environmental concern and presents landscapes in the human terms in which they exist. It’s either breathtakingly beautiful or achingly disturbing, but hardly both.   

 

Cruson’s paintings show at White Lotus Gallery through June 3.