James Kaneko Gallery

Gioia Fonda's drawings begin as photos of street debris.

0 comments | Print

City's junk becomes a cautionary artistic vision

Published: Friday, Jan. 27, 2012 - 12:00 am | Page 10TICKET

You would expect an exhibition at a college gallery to be educational. Gioia Fonda's show at the James Kaneko Gallery on the American River College campus is that in spades.

Fonda documents every step of the labor-intensive process by which she creates her masterful drawings of piles of junk. This body of work, one of which won the best of show award at last year's State Fair art show, is a poignant comment on a sad aspect of the economic downturn our city has been experiencing.

She begins with color photos of trash piled up on the street in front of houses in her neighborhood.

"Most of the piles," she writes, "seem to occur when an address has experienced an eviction, a foreclosure or sometimes a death: always some kind of transition."

Like canaries in coal mines, they are harbingers of worse things to come. For Fonda, they represent "not only a reflection of the lending crisis but also a comment on our rampant consumerism and the utter disposability of what we produce and what we buy."

That is scarcely a new idea, but Fonda treats it with a mixture of sadness and a formal integrity that lends the piles a kind of monumental grace. The giant pile with a soccer ball, a potted plant, an old bike and a wheelbarrow that was shown in the State Fair exhibition is on view here and is even more imposing in the smaller Kaneko gallery.

Surrounding it are other drawings, among them "Watering Can," a triangular pile of trash in which a watering can plays a small but significant role. A trio of drawings on the wall across from it features tangles of netting, worn tires, plastic jugs, and a stuffed toy. These are not only commentaries on our throwaway culture but strong abstractions reminiscent at times of Bauhaus Constructivism.

As interesting as the finished drawings are, a series of works that demonstrate how Fonda arrives at her destinations. She begins with the color photos, then isolates the shapes of the objects in the piles, draws them on paper and cuts them out. These cuttings she piles up and arranges into collages from which she then makes Xerox prints. It's a lengthy, exacting and time-consuming process, but it pays off with drawings that are both moving and formally elegant.

Accompanying Fonda's works at the campus gallery is a series of mostly small bronze and ceramic sculptures by Garr Ugalde. Their imagery is both innocent and menacing. Combining childhood toys with instruments of war, they comment on "how quickly the world engages its children in war."

"Beehive Rocker" places a child on a crude rocking horse surrounded by alphabet blocks. A beehive placed over the child's head adds a surreal note of danger. "Pecker" combines grenades and bird skulls. "Night Mother" gives us a pregnant woman with a birdhouse on her head.

Children's toys and the use of bird imagery, Ugalde writes, "speak to the ideal of freedom, innocence, and the safety of home." Though superficially, he notes, they seem to be innocuous, lurking among them are instruments of destruction, many derived from war toys.

Ugalde's small works made of bronze are intricate and imbued with a dark humor that turns disturbing as you note the details in them. A larger piece made of ceramic is blunter. Titled "I Used To Carry a Big Stick, Two," it gives us a pit bull with a grenade in its mouth sitting on a block covered with an American flag. Small texts cite places in which confrontations have occurred, among them Wounded Knee, Guantánamo and Havana.

Ugalde's work is a nice complement to Fonda's and the two visions result in a show that is both moving and thought-provoking. Curator Ramsey Harris has done a great job of installing the show. GIOIA FONDA: THE PILE SERIES

GARR UGALDE: WAR STORIES

What: Gioia Fonda lends a monumental grace to piles of refuse that she sees as "a comment on our rampant consumerism and the utter disposability of what we produce and what we buy." A complementary exhibit of small bronze and ceramic sculptures comes from Garr Ugalde. His imagery is both innocent and menacing, a comment on "how quickly the world engages its children in war."

Where: James Kaneko Gallery, Room 503, American River College, 4700 College Oak Drive, Sacramento

When: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays-Thursdays, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Fridays, or by appointment, through Feb. 8

Cost: Free

Contact: (916) 484-8399

© Copyright The Sacramento Bee. All rights reserved.

Read more articles by Victoria Dalkey



About Comments

Reader comments on Sacbee.com are the opinions of the writer, not The Sacramento Bee. If you see an objectionable comment, click the "Report Abuse" link below it. We will delete comments containing inappropriate links, obscenities, hate speech, and personal attacks. Flagrant or repeat violators will be banned. See more about comments here.

What You Should Know About Comments on Sacbee.com

Sacbee.com is happy to provide a forum for reader interaction, discussion, feedback and reaction to our stories. However, we reserve the right to delete inappropriate comments or ban users who can't play nice. (See our full terms of service here.)

Here are some rules of the road:

• Keep your comments civil. Don't insult one another or the subjects of our articles. If you think a comment violates our guidelines click the "Report Abuse" link to notify the moderators. Responding to the comment will only encourage bad behavior.

• Don't use profanities, vulgarities or hate speech. This is a general interest news site. Sometimes, there are children present. Don't say anything in a way you wouldn't want your own child to hear.

• Do not attack other users; focus your comments on issues, not individuals.

• Stay on topic. Only post comments relevant to the article at hand.

• Do not copy and paste outside material into the comment box.

• Don't repeat the same comment over and over. We heard you the first time.

• Do not use the commenting system for advertising. That's spam and it isn't allowed.

• Don't use all capital letters. That's akin to yelling and not appreciated by the audience.

• Don't flag other users' comments just because you don't agree with their point of view. Please only flag comments that violate these guidelines.

You should also know that The Sacramento Bee does not screen comments before they are posted. You are more likely to see inappropriate comments before our staff does, so we ask that you click the "Report Abuse" link to submit those comments for moderator review. You also may notify us via email at feedback@sacbee.com. Note the headline on which the comment is made and tell us the profile name of the user who made the comment. Remember, comment moderation is subjective. You may find some material objectionable that we won't and vice versa.

If you submit a comment, the user name of your account will appear along with it. Users cannot remove their own comments once they have submitted them.

hide comments
Sacramento Bee Job listing powered by Careerbuilder.com
Quick Job Search
Buy
Used Cars
Dealer and private-party ads
Make:

Model:

Price Range:
to
Search within:
miles of ZIP

Advanced Search | 1982 & Older



Find 'n' Save Daily DealGet the Deal!

Local Deals