Nathan Proutys mixed-media ceramic sculptures at Lacoste Gallery are often no larger than a cereal bowl, but each is a nuanced feast of texture, color, and form. That all sounds quite serious (and it is), but the first thing that draws you into one of these pieces is its comedy, which springs from formal juxtapositions its like seeing a pile of worms on a robots head, topped with a beret. Or a doughnut.
Look at The Bammers Rakish Angle. A soft, narrow-brimmed fedora shape in cantaloupe orange, topped with a pompom of blue ribbons, fastened with a glittery gold button. Negley Farson looks like a powder blue Cousin Itt in an orange party hat. In Doola, a white, red-speckled earthenware hump with a gray tongue sticking out loiters beneath a glossy but nonetheless daunting black cloud.
This artist is exquisitely attendant to detail. His finishes speckles, marble textures, powdery surfaces are intense. He crafts a small pedestal for each piece, which adds another formal twist. Negley Farson stands on a round pedestal topped with yellow, its white sides fanning out; and the orange underneath casts a reflection on the surface it sits on. Proutys colors burn gently. He uses long strips of clay that more resemble linguine than ceramics. In fact, these pieces have nothing of clays usual earthiness. They look like a toddlers toys, except that all the massaged details proclaim that theyre far more precious than that.