Hause Party
Castleberry Hill artist Diane Hause initially wanted to feature
30 years of her work at her Peters Street workspace and gallery.
But she laughs that she didn't have room in her 2,200-square-foot
gallery.
Instead, the work in "20/50"
covers a 20-year span in which
Hause's concerns have remained surprisingly unchanged.
Whether in painting, collage, prints, drawing or assemblage,
the Hause aesthetic endures.
Hause defines her self-retrospective
with plenty of her jewel-toned, Matisse-ian nudes who,
without clothes, become eternal symbols
of male and female. Doves, horses, the pyramids, the
Taj Mahal and other images reoccur to reflect a sensibility
that stretches beyond the Judeo-Christian Western imagination.
A new agey sensibility occasionally creeps into work
that borrows from religious movements outside of the
artist's cultural comfort zone, such as Islam and Buddhism.
But Hause's obvious sincerity and earnestness shine
through.
Her art feels as though the artist is
using her work in a fundamental way, like crop circles
on the ground or cave
paintings on a wall, in hopes
of communicating with someone
or something larger than herself.
In the striking 1995 painting "Drawn
& Quartered," executed in
her signature vivid
hues, Hause seems to encapsulate the enigma of male-female
relationships. The image is a mismatched puzzle
of male
and female interaction. A naked couple stands side by
side in a gesture of intimacy, but the man is right
side up and
the woman upside down. They may fit together
better in that configuration, but the possibility of
communication is more difficult.
Hause often makes a better impression
in such relatively austere, simple works than in the
chaotic collages and epic-sized paintings loaded with
jumbo-sized symbols. Her advocacy of the eternal, rather
than the here and now, comes through in "20/50."
It's just a shame that sometimes obvious, portentous
iconography can mask the intelligence and wit of this
artist's journey, which becomes more clear when she
interprets her painting "Civilization."
She describes the piece as a statement
on humankind's progress. The 75-inch-by-95-inch painting
boasts eternal mysteries like the Easter Island figures,
and the pyramids. Then, at the top of the painting,
is a ceiling fan -- modern man's contribution to civilization,
Hause laughs.
—Felicia Feaster,
for Creative Loafing
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