Tatet A '»H0U4vfeU/K botKC Painter Robert Johnson by Suzanne J.E. TourtiUott Nowhere is it more natural forfolks to teH stories than here in the Appalachians. Like their forebears, today's mountain folk spin tales for entertainment, to explain natural phenomena, or to help immor talize people they've known. Robert Johnson's whimsical paintings give texture to these spirited mountain tales, translating an oral tradition into tangible visual images. Although Johnson's work appears to be the product of a fevered imagination, his carefully planned paintings are the result of a serene and well-ordered mind. In these dream worlds, he combines his voice with those of hermits, bear spirits and trees. The imagery is magical and sinu ous, fantastical and humorous, based mainly on stories about people and places close to his home in the Celo Community of Burnsville, N.C. Johnson's formal education was eclectic. Bom in Venezuela, he moved to Pennsylvania as a teenager and did undergraduate work at the Uni versity of Louisville. For the next decade, his studies took him across the country and back again. In the Northeast, his instructors were disciples of such varied schools as the Bauhaus, Abstract Expression ism and traditional realism. His late 1960s West Coast/Bay Area influences emphasized symbolism, dream imagery and Jungian philosophy. The lumi nance of late medieval Sienese painting inspired him to go to Italy for self-study in egg tempera, an ancient and difficult technique. Over the years, he has adapted the egg tempera technique to acrylics which, in combination with oils, has become his principal medium. After a determined international search for an ideal place to live and work, Johnson settled on the Burnsville area 20 years ago. To fully appreciate Johnson's art, it's important to understand the connection between his work and his environment He and his family are part of the country's oldest land trust, the intentional community of Celo [see *Critical mass: Intentional communities in WNQ0 Green Line, Oct 1993]. Johnson believes that the communal life of Celo empowers people to be temporary, caring stewards of the land they occupy, and that such an approach to land-use is consistent with his intuitive relationship with nature. A younger Johnson found that he was caught between two worlds — the idealism of "beautiful nature," he said, "and mythological and dream imagery." His problem, as he saw it, was how to fit the interior and exterior imagery together. Realism, he said, did not tap his inner, experiential seif. The wellspring of Johnson's work comes from mountain living, sketching, meditation and listen ing. The tales have a gentle voice: how standing mountain got its name; the "Legend of Estatoe"; how Peggy Clauson once drowned a bear. The paintings incorporate the stories he hears about a place and its people. Where visual images cannot fully tell a story, Johnson incorporates textual ele ments. for example, "Hermit of Bald Mountain* depicts the tale of David Crier. On the canvas, Johnson adds the inscription, "spumed by a woman he loved ... he claimed Bald Mountain as his own and made his own laws." The salient details are arranged on the canvas in a cy clical manner: Crier occupiesa wood-snail's shell; he sits in lonely contem plation amid stylized trees and rocks; a unicorn glows faintly within a solar eclipse. Although the text is in Johnson's own voice, ne says, »■ "I think [that] stories about specific places can generate similar images for different people. These paintings are about people you run into, what they get out of being there.* The handwriting illuminates what can't be imaged, an *adjunct to the visual* In this unique fashion, johnson expresses his synthesis of a rich outward reality (both his own experiences and the stories he hears), and an equally potent, highly individualized interior state. He explained further: "In Nature, each ecosys tem has its own set of forms, whether rain forest or desert* Johnson's mood and the resulting images are specific responses to the biological or form level, he said. Becoming aware of that "feels more like I'm connecting to the earth, [but] I don't have Art Beat continued from Z1 Pine. (704) 765-1562. White Cold Cattery has added an upstairs exhibition room at its Biftmore Village location to 4 All Souk Crescent, Ashevle. Cattery owner Kate Godshalk is inaugu rating the new space with an exhfoit of her porcelain artworks. (704) 274-3355. Zone One Contemporary Cattery wifi feature the work of internationally renowned sculptor Dorothy GiSespie of New York. The show opens with a reception from 5*8 p.m. on Nov. 4 and runsthrough Jan, 1.37 Biftmore Ave., Asheville. (704)258-3088. at Pack Place presents "Paper Pleasures: Drawings 1500*1980/ which looks at nearly500years of Western Artfrom Italian Renaissance figure studies to Cattfbmia Conceptualism, through Nov. 28; and "Frammenti Dommestid," an exhibition of mixed-media works incorporating tile fragments by South Carolina artist/teacher Carol Pittman through Nov. 7. (704) 253-3227. Blue Spiral I presents Fall Color lit with featured artists Becky Gray; Biyant Hoi sen beck, Robert Johnson and Michael Sherrffl. The work of Coralie Tweed Is presented on the lower level, and Roger Smith's Hip Hop Theatre is in the sculpturegarden. Through Nov. 13.38 BitonoreAve.jTJW 251-0202. Creekskle Galleries in Banner Elk is exhibiting the works of over 200 local, regional and national potters, painters, sculp tors, weavers and other artists through Nov. 12. (704) 963-4288. Folk Art Center Guild members are featured in 'The Indelible Object," through Nov. 14 in the Main Gallery. Milepost 382 on the Blue Ridge Parkway. (704) 298-7928. Galax Artworx is hosting Asheville painter Chad Adair's first solo exhibition, through Nov. 21. The gallery continues to show works of the Meaders and Howell families (North Georgia folk pottery); And rew Costine (fine woodwork); and Feng Wei (mixed media). (704) 254-1170 or 258-9738. Mint Museum of Art presents paintings and photographs by Susan Brenner through Nov. 21. "Rivers of Gold: Pre Columbian Treasures from Sitio Conte," featuring 123 pieces of gold work from an ancient Panama nian cemetery site, through Jan. 2.2730Randolph Road, Charlotte, NC (704) 337-2000. Smoky Mountrin Art Center features drawings and three-dimensional works by Venezuelan artist Nelson Rgallo and works in a variety of meefia by Puerto Rican artist Annaruiz Bayon, through Nov. 30.103 Depot St., Bryson City, N.C (704)480-2403. Touchstone Cattery continues to show the works of photographer Dr. Kenneth Sinish; glass artist MarkW. Sanders; jewelry designer Mary Heald; potter Jeni Babin; box-maker Lou Woks; painters Carol Bomer; Ernie Howard and SladeTanner; multi-media artistlrisSandkuhler; etcher/painter JosephCulpepper; watercolorist Mary Alice Braukman; papier mache sculptor Basil Polevoy; and soapstonesculptor Alice Massengale. Also on efisplay are photographs by Carol Faust; sculptures by Mark Strom; commentary art by Joe Bruneau; wind sculptures by Michael Tarillion; raku pottery by James Franklin; flash-fired raku by John Sherrill; paintings by Robert Smet; and pot tery by Tom Ferguson. 318 N. Main St., Hendersonville. (704) 692-2191. UNCA's University Gallery hosts "Reflections" — 50 black-and-white photos by Alice Hardin, the culmination of her work toward a BFA at UNCA (704) 251 -6559. —■ ■DEER HUNTER* a coherent mythology that fits together—it's all in bits and pieces." That Sienese influence — narrative, highly de tailed and polished — is strongly evident in all his work. All the forms are simplified yet intricately patterned and modulated, using the flattened spa tial effects often seen in folk painting. Stylized vegetation and animal or geographic forms are often deeply symbolic, lushly curving and puking with intuitive harmonies. Johnson has taught painting for many years, primarily in North Carolina, and now teaches egg tempera fresco technique at Duke University. A number of his frescoes can be seen in the Burnsville area—one at the Burnsville post office. He exhibits regularly throughout the region, and is repre sented in the Fall Color III exhibit at Blue Spiral I in downtown Asheville, through Nov. 13. 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