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human-insect hybrid whose expelled innards create psychedelic patterns,
a Plasticine-silenced Mickey Mouse-eared demonic baby, a giant-mouthed
creature whose teeth operate as a mincing plate into an oesophageal
abyss. These are some of the characters you can expect to find in
an Ansel Krut painting, while others stretch the
capabilities of written description. Krut's works
portray a world beyond the everyday comfort zone, where the social
boundaries and academic theories upon which we base reality have
been bent over and spanked, relativity and Darwinism abandoned in
favour of a more fantastical view. The view is rarely pretty, but
often funny and disturbing. Krut's dry wit and
love of paint provide a welcome veneer between the viewer and a
range of abject activities: a sweetshop window onto human perversity.
Between portraits, landscapes and storyboards, these paintings amalgamate
the different realities we experience: the point where our internal
mental processes collide with life outside. They remind us of the
unspoken rules and regulations that govern society. What if we were
to let ourselves off the hook of normalcy, where would the paths
of our imaginations lead? Krut's realities may segue neatly in 'real'
time, but converge with very different edges - his separate roles
as Hackney-based painter, anonymous man on the street and father
are worlds apart, yet facets of the same entity. When you attempt
to unravel Krut's increasingly complex narratives,
a mix of highbrow and more throwaway references to art history,
graphic media and the tics and quirks of humanity form a curious
queue in the back of the mind.
Krut treats the canvas as fantasy landscape, a
means for
both bringing to light and disguising his imaginary accounts
with the stuff of paint. Often there is little or no geographic
information with the ground simply serving, like a conventional
portrait, as a backdrop to the subject. A strange, mutant figure
sits atop a viridian box, its beautifully suggested crab legs and
vibrant head plumage rendered all the more radiant against a taupe
setting. Useless tangerine arms twist improbably behind a dress
dummy torso. In the most recent works, the characters and surroundings
appear to be developing as part of the same entity. Complex layers
of panoramic strata, flesh, colourful motifs and props redirect
the eye beyond the surface activity. In one large-scale work, a
duck-faced creature and a balloon headed dominatrix perform sub-dom
circus tricks, barely distinguishable from the gaudy big-top/kite
motif that envelops them. The birdman's buff underbelly apes the
hue cast by the tent/bunting shadow, while the mistress' iron-grey
apparel is picked out in the warped wheel structure of the cart
she rides.
We discover Krut's world through its characters.
This motley demographic makes for difficult and improbable classification.
They have evolved from vaudeville, corseted portrait subjects to
amoral alleyway characters and amorphous maggot-riddled beings.
Krut's characterisation borrows from a variety of animation, film
and painting sources. Tangible objects and matter (vegetables, turds,
blow-up dolls, twigs and orifices) reappear as living organisms
and compositional symbols. Crude lines and improper behaviour bring
to mind Max Beckman's bar scenes and Philip Guston's fag-smoking
anti-heroes; animalistic, overblown features often have an early
Disney, or Tim Burton feel, while patterned limbs and surface motifs
give a passing wink to David Hockney's harlequins and Bloomsbury
decoration. Improbable scenarios employ modern, off-the-wall cartoon
irreverence (think 'Stressed Eric' or 'Ren and Stimpy') and primitively
drawn props, such as platforms and wooden boxes, seem to set the
scene for a veritable freak circus. Krut's use of colour is at once
deliberately childlike and reluctantly sophisticated. In one image,
a turd-eating character's joyfully exposed arsehole could also pass
as an exquisite lilac flower.
There is an unnerving childlike knowingness about these characters
- like de-programmed beings discovering themselves for the first
time. Emotionally they sit between pathos and futility. Even when
depicted in pairs or groups the focus remains on the individual
and their personal predicament. The subjects appear shackled together,
either by some physical deformity or warped narrative that forces
them to inhabit the same canvas space. Sometimes they stare listlessly
past us into a fictitious distance, in a trance-, drug- or dream-like
state, seemingly unaware of their reality or the other hybrid creatures
around them. In other instances they court attention -sometimes
coquettish, sometimes insouciant -but whether serving penance or
enjoying suspect activities, they appear unapologetic in the acts
they commit.
Krut's recent show at domoBaal consisted of uniformly
sized, loosely depicted drawings. While some of his concerns remain
the same in oil, the possibilities of the medium and scale of the
works make the paintings a very different proposition. Each image,
despite the varying speeds at which they have been produced, has
a more fixed quality. There is less room to hide from Krut's unabashed
visions. The hand-sized appeal of the drawings is replaced with
his ever more subtle proliferation of seductive painterly touches,
woven within a bold and complex visual narrative, as he continues
to play mediator between good and bad taste. You could say that
delving into the depths of one's imagination and wrestling with
dark and difficult material is brave enough in its own right, but
for Krut it seems that real bravery lies in just
what you are prepared to do with the paint.
© Rebecca Geldard, May 2004, London
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