By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt.
Photos by Maurice Hewitt.
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The Wrestlers, by John Singletary. Oil on canvas, 60” x 40”. |
John Singletary is a singular artist, and Sun Goin’ Down is his first
solo exhibition since receiving his MFA at UC San Diego in May. It’s a chance
to experience nine of his soulfully eloquent paintings in the small but special
Oolong Gallery, recently relocated to RSF from Solana Beach.
Photos can hardly do these
pieces justice; there’s no substitute for seeing them face to face. And the
longer you look, the more they command your attention.
Here’s a little intro to the
artist and his work, which will be on view through June 25th.
He was born in Chicago, the
youngest of seven children, and he started drawing early on.
“A couple of my sisters were
into art in high school, and I’d draw with them,” he said. “I wasn’t even in
school yet, but I really loved drawing; I didn’t get into painting until much
later. And my grandfather was a pastor, so the Christian Bible was a big part
of my life. It was a principal source of information and storytelling, given to
me with love and a sense of community. But as I grew older, I came to realize
how many people had it forced on them, how it could be a tool of fear and
control.”
The large-scale painting above
is his version of the biblical story of Jacob wrestling with God.
“Jacob had tricked his brother
Esau into selling his birthright--a blessing from their father, Isaac--and he
ends up wrestling with God. He’s nervous and stressed and God puts his hip out
of place. It’s all pain and fear: you’re wrestling yourself, and you’re holding
each other up and fighting at the same time.”
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The artist with Self Portrait in a Tree III, the most recent of a set of three paintings on wood. |
“I call them Self Portraits
because of the tradition of self-portraiture in the history of painting, but
I’m in all the other pieces here too. They’re all about me and my family and my
girlfriend. It’s a way for me to better understand all these things in my life
and get away from thinking too much.”
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Three Faces of the Artist: Self Portraits in a Tree I, II and III |
“These pieces contain more
than brushstrokes. I got the cypress wood from a friend, and there are cracks
in the wood that speak too. This is my first time seeing them hung in a
gallery!”
Why did Singletary call his
exhibition Sun Goin’ Down? It’s a line from a song by the late great
Texas bluesman Lightnin’ Hopkins. This whole show, he said, is inspired by the
blues.
“Blues is an outpouring of
emotion from the clash between African spirituality and American Christianity.
I love blues music but I’m interested in the pain that creates it. My grandma
was a sharecropper in Waco, Texas. I got my BFA at Baylor University there.”
Along the way, he’s had his
work shown at MOMA P.S.1 in NYC and the Museum of African American Culture in
Houston, and even on the cover of Time Magazine. Now you can have a taste of it right here in
Rancho Santa Fe. And there will be a very special event on the evening of
Juneteenth (June 19th) when he’ll be projecting a silent
showing of a 1968 film about Lightnin’ Hopkins on the wall between his
paintings and accompanying it with a two-hour soundtrack he put together
including Detroit techno, Chicago house, and soul music, plus a few pieces he’s
written himself, since he’s also a musician. He calls this “activating my
paintings by celebrating the tradition of black dance music.”
I can’t think of a happier way to spend a few hours than
this. And if you add the possibility of chatting with the artist in person,
you’re sure to feel nothing but joy at “Sun
Goin’ Down”.
Sun Goin’ Down at Oolong Gallery
A solo exhibition by John
Singletary
On view through June 25th
at 6030 La Flecha, Rancho Santa Fe, CA 92067
info@oolongallery.com 858-229-2788
Hours: Wednesday-Saturday, 11
a.m.-5 p.m.
Special Juneteenth event: June
19, 7-9 p.m.
Lonnie
Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has
been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen
years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net