Artist Brady Dollyhigh presents an otherworldly, and sometimes violent, narrative

0

I’ve been following artist Brady Dollyhigh for the whole of his career, which would be about four years now. The first time I wrote about him, in late 2019, he was just 19 years old and had somehow landed a solo exhibition of his ink drawings at the nonprofit Lakewood Cultural Center — not exactly the Museum of Contemporary Art, but surely a respectable place where many of the region’s best and most seasoned artists have displayed their work.

It was impossible not to pay attention and wonder where he would show up next.

The answer, it turns out, is in the commercial gallery world. Dollyhigh is back for a second major public outing this month at Bell Projects, a young and ambitious space in Denver’s City Park neighborhood.

Scenes by Brady Dollyhigh on the wall at Bell Projects. (Daniel Tseng, Special to The Denver Post)
Scenes by Brady Dollyhigh on the wall at Bell Projects. (Daniel Tseng, Special to The Denver Post)

The good news is that extending his professional reach, this time with paintings, has not ruined him or forced a pre-mature turn in his work. Just the opposite, really. The exhibition is one of the most youthful exercises I’ve seen in a commercial gallery in some time.

Here is Dollyhigh doing what artists without a lot of age or means do: getting clever, being resourceful, turning cheap materials into something interesting. He employs a lot of spray paint, uses metal road signs as canvases. The subject matter revolves around a high fantasy storyline that aptly reflects a generation influenced by things like the “Lord of the Rings” movies or narrative video games. The exhibition is action-packed, more than a little violent, and has a grandiose title: “A Hunter Named Truth.”

There is a DIY, art-school edge to it all — though it is interesting to note here that Dollyhigh never went to art school. He is self-taught and carving out his career without the usual connections.

What he does have are mentors, including gallerist Lindsey Bell, who has shaped this raw material into something that appears to be sophisticated and sellable. The paintings may be rough around the edges but they feel like commodities. That’s not a bad thing; artists need to sell work to stay viable, and it is reassuring to see a gallery developing fresh talent.

The 12 large-scale works in the exhibition each capture a scene in Dollyhigh’s dark fairytale about three characters named Beauty, Truth and The Thief.  It’s an allegory, of sorts, about the impossibility of ideal beauty to survive in an ugly and practical world. Beauty is born and killed by Truth, again and again, through one grisly method or another.

Brady Dollyhigh’s “A Hunter Named Truth” runs through Jan. 29 at Bell Projects in City Park. (Daniel Tseng, Special to The Denver Post)

The Thief watches it all from a distance “never attempting to save Beauty; only profiting from its cyclical death,” as Dollyhigh explains, somewhat cryptically, in his artist’s statement. It is easy to interpret The Thief as a stand-in for artists themselves, who, through their work, exploit beauty for pleasure and profit as a habit.

This could fall into cliche, but the artist does just enough to save himself from ruin and keep viewers tuned in. The character of Beauty, against convention, is depicted as chunky, muscular and masculine. He, or she, has thick arms and oversized hands and looks like a two-dimensional version of one of 20th-century modernist sculptor Henry Moore’s reclining nudes.

The character’s apparent strength is undermined by its ultimate victimization. We do get one painting titled “Beauty Lounging,” which has the protagonist laying on its back in peaceful repose. But we also get “The Kill,” where Beauty is being stabbed to death. Dollyhigh renders the scene in a monochromatic back-and-white — except for a blood splattering in brilliant red.

Stay connected with us on social media platform for instant update click here to join our  Twitter, & Facebook

We are now on Telegram. Click here to join our channel (@TechiUpdate) and stay updated with the latest Technology headlines.

For all the latest Entertainment News Click Here 

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! Rapidtelecast.com is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected]. The content will be deleted within 24 hours.
Leave a comment