2020 Stanley Wany: INWARDS Publication

Page 11

I N W A R D S

Publisher

Perc Tucker Regional Gallery

Townsville City Council

PO Box 1268

Townsville, Queensland 4810

ptrg@townsville.qld.gov.au

This publication ©Galleries, Townsville City Council, and the respective artists and authors

ISBN: 978-0-949461-36-0

Contributing authors

Stanley Wany Jonathan McBurnie

Publication design

The Hunting House

Typeface Gotham Garamond Premier Pro

Cover image

Stanley Wany, Untitled (Back) [detail] 2019

Pen and ink on Strathmore paper, 30.5 x 213.4 cm

Perc Tucker Regional Gallery

Cnr. Denham and Flinders St

Townsville QLD 4810 (07) 4727 9011

ptrg@townsville.qld.gov.au

whatson.townsville.qld.gov.au

Mon – Fri: 10am – 5pm Sat – Sun: 10am – 2pm

STANLEY WANY INWARDS Perc Tucker Regional Gallery 14 February – 29 March, 2020 Contents Foreword 5 Stanley Wany Stanley Wany: Inwards 11 Jonathan McBurnie
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Ice Cream Truck 2019 Markers and ink on Strathmore paper 76.2 x 51.2 cm

FOREWORD

The most influential factor in my work is my battle with insomnia. After being awake for so long, the line between reality and imagination starts to fade. Eventually, the unconscious mind takes over reality and consciousness slips into the background. For me, it is an experience similar to what Terence McKenna describes in his work as a psychedelic traveller. Although I am perfectly lucid, wide awake and will remember everything, another world comes forward. A world deep into the unconscious, beyond the Anima and Animus, where the Jungian self resides. A world with its own emotions, physics and morals, like a waking dream. Through the whole thing, I am helpless, ever the observer in my own experience.

The majority of my work is produced in this state. Most of them created between two and four am after long days or weeks of insomnia. My aim is not to be the storyteller, but merely the one who assembles the elements for people to tell their own stories, if they choose to do so.

As it is said in the Talmud: the dream is its own interpretation.

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Remember, This Never Happened [detail] 2013

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Pen and ink on Bristol 35.6 x 129.5 cm
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Remember, This Never Happened [detail] 2013

Pen and ink on Bristol 35.6 x 129.5 cm

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9

All of The Yesterdays and Tomorrows 2019

Ink and markers on Strathmore paper

10
40.6 x 50.8 cm

STANLEY WANY INWARDS

comics are getting their due; recent years have seen major exhibitions of key cartoonists, including Jack Kirby, Robert Crumb, and Daniel Clowes. Some artists, such as Kent Williams, Raymond Pettibon, and Josh Bayer manage to keep their hand in both worlds, but there is usually a sense that such an artist may belong to one context rather than the other. Yet in recent years, more artists are appearing in both scenes who appear unconcerned with either definition; Gary Panter and Lale Westvind both regularly exhibit and make comics, seemingly without prioritising one over the other. Many more artists, such as Chris Ware, are happy to push the comics form itself into territory usually considered more squarely located on the visual arts side of the fence.

IT IS IN THIS SLIPPAGE BETWEEN MEDIA AND DISCIPLINE WHERE COMICS HAVE ALWAYS FOUND THEIR MOST THRILLING AND EFFUSIVE GRAPHIC POWER, AND THE VISUAL ARTS SEEK TO BE CATCHING ON. IT IS IN THIS

Despite the relatively recent dubbing of comics’ legitimacy, which has been building in urgency and momentum almost since the form’s inception, there remain relatively few successful crossover artists of both the gallery and comics worlds. Despite the success of many cartoonists in other fields (especially film and animation, where the sequential cognition of the cartoonist is invaluable, as demonstrated with the non-comics work of Geof Darrow, Jean Giraud, Frank Miller, Guy Davis and many others), few have managed to cross over into the world of fine arts. This is in part due to the rigorous, exclusive, and monied gatekeeping of the fine art world, and its aversion to comics’ more working-class origins. Historically, comicsderived imagery has been much more palatable in the fine arts when recontextualized through a distancing lens of theory, ala Dada and Pop Art.

This barrier is slowly being broken down thanks to the digital world’s complete devaluation of cultural capital, and its omnivorous appetite for all things visual, simultaneously promoting comic book imagery as one of the preeminent visual languages of the new century, while destabilising the industry and artistic discipline from whence it came. Ironically, this same force of change is destabilising the commercial gallery system. At the same time in many venerable fine art institutions, the masters of

AMORPHOUS, FAST-CHANGING CONTEXT THAT CANADA’S STANLEY WANY BELONGS.
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The Dream Cave [detail] 2016 Ink and graphite on paper 35.5 x 43.2 cm, set of 10 drawings

Trained in Canada’s Université du Québec en Outaouais, Wany’s practice is equally sure-footed within the context of the page and the wall, the product of a visual appetite just as indebted to the Franco-Belgian bande dessinée school of cartooning as any gallery artist. Many of Wany’s comics rely solely on the artist’s talent for narrative and thundering drawing ability, willing to subvert conventions of comics as much as the gallery. In Wany’s often wordless comics, readers are guided visually. While comics are often classified as a hybrid of word and image, this is not completely accurate; there is a wellestablished tradition of wordless comics. Part of comics’ joy as an art form, and difficulty in being deconstructed on the same terms as, say, literature, film, or visual art, is that it has more than a passing relationship to all three. While comics are indeed a hybrid form, the lack of one element, such as the written word, does not change its designation. Many theorists have wrestled with what

makes a comic, but the form resists such definition perhaps not because of its hybridity (for hybridity is becoming more and more common in the digital world, and as such, less dangerous), but for its fluidity; it is a form which has existed between established definitions for so long, yet it is distinctive.

Westvind’s masterpiece, Grip 2 (2019), is completely wordless, and yet manages to convey spiritual, feminist, social and spiritual messages with ease, and Frank Miller’s Silent Night (1995) remains one of the visual highlights of his Sin City series (1991-2000). But ‘silent’ comics are by no means new; one of comics’ giants, Windsor McCay, regularly used significant passages within his masterpiece, Little Nemo in Slumberland, without words, masterful demonstrations of the dictum ‘show, don’t tell’.

Wany’s practice recalls the metaphysical and symbolist approaches very much out of step with contemporary art. Wany attributes Sergio Toppi, Gustav Klimt, and Gustave

Doré as having the greatest influence upon his work. This makes sense on several levels; all three are known for their symbolist approaches, with recurring images and ciphers, interest in psychology, eroticism and the unconscious, and for their moody, black and white draftsmanship. Toppi, as a cartoonist, is particularly fascinating in his unhurried and uncluttered use of panels.

WANY, WITH HIS IMAGES

SLOWLY UNCOILING ACROSS THE PAGES LIKE SMOKE, OFTEN OVERLAYS IMAGES, MORPHING AND SHIFTING INTO THE NEXT FORM. This almost psychedelic imbrication of references sometimes recalls the work of Mati Klarwein, Arthur Ranson, and Moebius at his trippiest.

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storytelling with a shimmering graphic aesthetic.

formulae, balancing the languid numbness of the

Wany’s comics are a wonderful disruption of such

of balance throughout page and panels alike.

make a certain narrative sense, as well the challenge

atypical of many comics, a form often expected to

continuum of visual problems and solutions. This is

a direct impact on the next aspect, and the next, a

influence on the next. Something drawn will have

much like Wany’s comics, one part has a direct

specifically designed around the artist’s habits and,

in the work, it is created within a framework

there is a level of surrealist improvisation involved

regard would not do the work justice. While yes,

must be noted that to make assumptions in this

of ideas and a method of structuring the work. It

which leans into the subconscious as both a source

Inwards refers in part to Wany’s method of working,

yet still open to the same slow shifts in form.

mix, directing the reader/viewer more explicitly,

prepetition of panel configurations thrown into the

and S equences work on the same logic, with the

and on until a sense of unity is achieved. Agalma

to solve, which is itself a visual problem, and on

is drawn, a visual problem for the next element

and even detailed sketches, are avoided. One element

creation, while close planning, tight compositions,

improvisation and exploration are central to their

follow the same narrative and visual philosophies;

a fundamental level, his comics and his art both

as Wany’s exhibition. The reason for this is that, on

they included together, and certainly not so easily

setting (whether you agree with it or not), rarely are

are becoming more and more common in a gallery

is actually quite radical, even today. While comics

drawing in the gallery context seems obvious, but it

Such a comfortable proximity between comics and

made up of dense, intricately rendered skeins of ink.

Back) (2019), some of which reach seven feet,

(2013), Nomo (2014) and Untitled (Front and

drawings such as Remember, This Never Happened

sit incredibly neatly with Wany’s epic, multi-panel

novels Sequences (2017) and Agalma (2015). These

many of which were a part of his astounding graphic

Inwards includes a multitude of recent drawings,

linework and interwinding narratives.

will respond strongly to the artist’s beguiling

legacy of drawing, and I am sure that audiences

as an artistic community, is home to a rich

honoured to host his exquisite work. Townsville,

Australia, and Perc Tucker Regional Gallery are

Inwards marks Wany’s first exhibition in

more alluring through Wany’s graphic sensibility.

tantalising narrative possibilities and are made all the

the life of a new parent. This open-endedness offers

of the rapidly changing variables that are a part of

approach through which the artist can make sense

more than a studio through-line, a considered

consistent practice, even if this consistency is no

structured practice becomes key in enabling a

over long stretches of wee hours. Thus, a loosely-

hours and seizing moments to work on pieces

methodology, taking advantage of these restless

with a desire to keep productive, grew the artist’s

Out of a difficulty in getting regular sleep, coupled

YEARS OF PARENTHOOD.

ACCUSTOMED TO IN THE EARLY

AND THE STRANGE, NOCTURNAL SEMI-CONSCIOUSNESS THAT A PARENT CAN GROW

INEVITABLE SLEEPLESS NIGHTS,

CHILD, AND WITH THIS, THE

ARRIVAL OF HIS FIRST

CHANGE IN HIS LIFE: THE

ATTRIBUTED TO A DRAMATIC

TO HIS RECENT WORK CAN BE

MUCH OF WANY’S APPROACH

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Mary May be Number 9 2019

Ink and markers on Strathmore paper
15
40.6 x 50.8 cm

Pages 16–19

Untitled (Back) [detail] 2019

Pen and ink on Strathmore paper
16
30.5 x 213.4 cm
and markers on Strathmore paper 40.6 x 50.8 cm 20
Why Must You Even Try 2019 Ink
Sweet Cause in Vain 2019 Ink and markers on Strathmore paper
21
40.6 x 50.8 cm

Pages 22–25

Pages from Sequences 2017

Ink on paper

142.24 x 129.54 cm, set of 9 pages

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23
24
25

Agalma 2015

China ink on Bristol velum

35.56 x 172.72 cm

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27

Sequences II [detail] 2017

Pen and ink on Bristol
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35.6 x 215.9 cm

Sequences II [detail] 2017

Pen and ink on Bristol

35.6 x 215.9 cm

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Nomo 2014 Pen and ink on Bristol
32
35.6 x 129.5 cm
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Nomo [detail] 2014

Pen and ink on Bristol

35.56 x 43.2 cm

Opposite page

Nomo [detail] 2019

Pen and ink on Bristol

35.56 x 64.77cm

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Pages 36–39

Untitled (Front) [detail] 2019

Pen and ink on Strathmore paper

30.5 x 213.4 cm

39

Maybe Tomorrow 2019

Ink and markers on Strathmore paper

40.6 x 50.8 cm

Opposite page

Little Miss Strange 2019

Ink and markers on Strathmore paper

40.6 x 50.8 cm

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42

NinaTrek 2019

Ink and graphite on paper

29.72 x 41.91 cm

Opposite page left

Ancestry 2019

China ink, acrylic medium and Liquitex

flexible modeling paste on Strathmore

mixed media 500 series paper

106.7 x 149.9 cm

Opposite page right

Towards abstraction 2019

China ink, acrylic medium and Liquitex

flexible modeling paste on Strathmore

mixed media 500 series paper

106.7 x 149.9 cm

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Pages 44–47

Pages from Sequences 2017

Ink on paper

142.24 x 129.54 cm, set of 9 pages

44
45
46
47

Untitled (The Refugee) 2019

Ink and markers on Strathmore paper

40.6 x 50.8 cm

Opposite page left

Sing For Sunshine 2019

China ink, acrylic medium and Liquitex flexible modeling paste on Strathmore mixed media 500 series paper

106.7 x 149.9 cm

Opposite page right

Somewhere in The Dreams 2019

China ink, acrylic medium and Liquitex flexible modeling paste on Strathmore mixed media 500 series paper

106.7 x 149.9 cm

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Perc Tucker Regional Gallery

Jonathan McBurnie Creative Director

Erwin Cruz Senior Collections and Exhibition Officer

Sarah Reddington Senior Education and Programs Officer

Lucy Belle Tesoriero Curatorial Assistant

Jo Lankester Collections Management Officer

Emily Donaldson Exhibitions Officer

Leonardo Valero Exhibitions Officer

Tanya Tanner Public Art Officer

Jake Pullyn Exhibitions Officer

Tegan Jackson Arts Administration Officer

Rachel Cunningham Gallery Assistant

Wendy Bainbridge Gallery Assistant

Michael Favot Gallery Assistant

Chloe Lindo Gallery Assistant

Samuel Smith Gallery Assistant

Veerle Janssens Gallery Assistant

Amy Licciardello Business Support Officer

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