ART REVIEW: "M.C. Escher: Reality and Illusion"-Currier Museum of Art, New Hampshire
Over Thanksgiving break, I took a jaunt to one of my
old haunts: The Currier Museum of Art in Manchester, New Hampshire. (I previously reviewed a show at the Currier and also wrote a museum overview.) I was
excited to see the current show on display, “M.C. Escher: Reality and
Illusion,” and I am pleased to report that the exhibit provided an engrossing,
in-depth Escher experience that any museum would be proud to mount.
The exhibit spans several galleries, and for good
reason: there are around 180 works on display, primarily on loan from the
Herakleidon Museum in Athens, Greece. For those not in the know, M.C. Escher
was a Dutch artist whose works spanned much of the 20th
century. He is best known for his mathematical and illusionistic woodcuts,
mezzotints, and lithographs, all of which are imbued with a careful internal
logic and sense of mystery and impossibility. I also exited “M.C. Escher:
Reality and Illusion” having been exposed to a good many early works of his
that make use of different media, such as pen-and-ink, crayon, and charcoal.
This exhibit was an excellent opportunity to see how
Escher’s oeuvre shifted and morphed and re-morphed over the course of his life.
The exhibit began with his simpler woodcuts of Italian landscapes and
Biblical scenes, progressed to his experimentations with creating whole other
worlds, and culminated in his later fascination with “tessellations” and
metamorphosis. It’s intriguing to see how his more well-known surrealist style
is nascent in his more realistic works: it’s as if we are watching him reach a
whole new level of consciousness, a new state of mind, through his artwork.
While the majority of his Italian landscape prints are
somewhat pedestrian among his body of work, among the early 1920s works are the
highlights Second Day of Creation (1925), a woodcut whose defined
line-work echoes Japanese seascapes, and Standing Nude (1920s), a
charcoal and crayon drawing of a spare, elegant, nude woman. Highlights from
later in his early career include the Tower of Babel (1928) and La
Cathédrale Engloutie (1929), both of which display Escher’s dipping his toe
into the waters of surrealism. The former work, with its dramatic two-point
perspective and view from above, recalls later “impossible” works such as Ascending
and Descending (1960); the latter creates a dreamlike, melancholy air with
its half-submerged cathedral and tiny boat approaching the structure. Also on
display is the compelling Dream (Mantis Religiosa) (1935), which hints
slyly at Escher’s later depictions of endless colonnades and barrel-vaulted
ceilings.
Moving along to his more well-known works, the exhibit
has on display all of the classics, without which an exhibit on Escher would be
incomplete: Drawing Hands (1948), which elegantly depicts an endless
cycle of two hands drawing one another into life; the aforementioned Ascending
and Descending, with its endless fantastical architecture, and Three
Worlds (1955), which folds several avenues of the natural world onto one
another. Each of these works is famous, and rightly so.
Many of Escher’s works after 1938 were concerned with
mathematics and “tessellations,” [[which refers to “the tiling of a plane using
one or more geometric shapes, called tiles, with no overlaps and no gaps”
(Wikipedia).]] As I am not a student of mathematics, I cannot comment on the
mathematical principles of Escher's tessellations; I can only comment on the
beauty of these ingenious, playful, and excellently rendered works of art.
Highlights among these tessellations include Day
and Night (1938), which depicts reversed, black-and-white mirror images of
birds becoming fields as they loom over matching towns in the corners of the
composition; and Metamorphosis 2 (1940), a stunning feat of technical
mastery and creativity. I could only stare, amazed, as a chessboard became
reptiles, which became hexagons, which became bugs, which became fish, then
birds, then blocks, then buildings, then a chess game, to black and white
squares again, all as natural and visually smooth as can be. Also entertaining
is the witty Liberation (1955), in which triangles printed onto a piece
of parchment wrest themselves out of the geometric shapes, turn into birds, and
fly off the paper. While I am someone who shies away from mathematics in
general, these tessellations reveal a beauty in math that is all too easy to
ignore. There is a comforting aspect in the rigidity of the mathematical rules
he is following, and it is within the confines of the rules of mathematics that
Escher is most free.
I highly recommend
seeing “M.C. Escher: Reality and Illusion.” Its breadth and depth are quite
impressive, and any viewer will come out of this exhibit realizing that Escher
has more to offer than what we usually see on posters and in coffee table
books. If you are in the New England area, don’t miss it! The exhibit closes January 5th.
Escher rocks! Day and Night is genius. Excellent review!
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