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Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts
Morris Gallery
Stephen Talasnik
Mythology: Recent Drawings
March 13 through April 26, 1987
To some eyes, the use of color in art may seem a teleological necessity, as it has been in television and film. Yet it is just this atavistic sense of belonging to an earlier time and place that commends a grissaille palette to Stephen Talasnik. He is an artist attracted by the black and white of classic documentary photography, in which images appear at one remove from the depicted reality.
Stephen Talasnik's primary work has always been drawing. He often teases an extraordinarily velvety chiaroscuro from his charcoal and graphite images by using such subtractive tools as erasers. Surfaces are like a palimpsest as the artist seems to delve below the forms to reveal earlier strata of visual information. His classically inspired subjects appear both physically and figuratively "unearthed." Because he is such an inventive appropriator of past styles, Talasnik's drawings are mysteriously allusive, evoking a strong feeling of history.
Mythology, the title of his Morris Gallery exhibition,
consists of four series of black and white works on paper. The largest
in scale, "Fossilized Frescoes," includes two vertical
drawings in which the figure makes an appearance for the first time
in his mature work. Working from the model, Talasnik addresses the
body directly, dealing with a human presence as distinct from the
mosaicized bodies in the "Legends" series. Recent travels
in Italy inform the imagery in the "Manuscripts'' and "Travel
Drawings" series. Talasnik's highly original imagery, matched
by his bravura techniques, results in a compelling and beautiful
body of work.
Judith Stein
Associate Curator and Coordinator, Morris Gallery Checklist
1. Visionary: Manuscript Series #1, 1985-86
Pencil on Stonehenge paper, 31 x 22" Collection of The Prudential Insurance Company of America 2. Seducer: Manuscript Series #2,1985-86
Pencil on Stonehenge paper, 31 x 22'
Collection of The Prudential Insurance Company of America 3. La Battaglia: Hero: Manuscript Series #6 (diptych),
1986
Pencil on Arches W.C. paper, 31 x 22'
Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 4. La Battaglia: Heroine: Manuscript Series #7 (diptych),
1986
Pencil on Arches W.C. paper, 31 x 22"
Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 5. Duplicity: Manuscript Series #8,1986
Pencil on Arches W.C paper, 311/2 x 22" Private collection, Philadelphia 6. Flaying: Manuscript Series #9,1986
Pencil on Arches W.C. paper, 311/2 x 22" Collection of Fred Gilbert, New York 7. False Messiah.Legend Series #1, 1986
Charcoal and Negro pencil on Stonehenge paper, 42 x 42" Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Stewart Resnick 8. False Fire: Legend Series #2,1986 Charcoal and Negro
pencil on Stonehenge paper, 42 x 421 Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 9. The Infidel: Legend Series #3,1986
Charcoal and Negro pencil, 42 x 42" Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 10. The Obsession: Legend Series #4, 1986
Charcoal and Negro pencil, 42 x 42" Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 11. The Mirage: Legend Series #5,1986
Charcoal and Negro pencil, 42 x 42" Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 12, Fishtrap, Dawn: Legend Series #6, 1986
Charcoal and Negro pencil, 42 x 42" Collection of James F. Anthony III 13. Fishtrap, Dusk: Legend Series #7, 1986
Charcoal and Negro pencil, 42 x 42" Collection of James F. Anthony III 14. Revelation: Fossilized Fresco #2,1987
Charcoal and carbon pencil on Stonehenge paper, 96 x 42'
Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 15. Desecration: Fossilized Fresco #3, 1987
Charcoal and carbon pencil on Stonehenge paper, 96 x 42'
Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 16. Tuscany: Shroud #2, 1987
Pencil on Stonehenge paper, 17 x 24'
Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery 17. Umbria: Shroud #3, 1987
Pencil on Arches W.C. paper, 17 x 24"
Courtesy of Dolan/Maxwell Gallery The works for this exhibition were made possible by a generous grant
from the National Endowment for the Arts.
Steven Talasnik was born in Philadelphia
in 1954. He received his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Rhode Island
School of Design (1972-76), and earned his Master of Fine Arts from
the Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia and in Rome (1977-79). From
1980 through 1986, he served as gallery coordinator for the Samuel
S. Fleisher Art Memorial in Philadelphia. Currently, he is an adjunct
instructor of drawing at the Tyler School of Art, and he has been
appointed assistant professor of art at Temple University Japan
in Tokyo, effective fall 1987.
Talasnik has received fellowships from the National Endowment for
the Arts (1985) and the MacDowell Colony (1987), and he was also
a visiting artist at the Brandywine Graphics Workshop. His work
is represented in numerous permanent art collections, including
the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Pennsylvania Academy of the
Fine Arts, The Free Library of Philadelphia, the University of Delaware,
the Philadelphia College of Art Print Collection, the FICA Victor
Company, The Prudential Life Insurance Company, and the Synthes.
Selected Individual Exhibitions
1987
Dolan/Maxwell Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
1985,1984
Janet Fleisher Gallery, Philadelphia, PA
1983
Drawings and Sculpture, Philadelphia Art Alliance, Philadelphia,
PA
Drawings, Dubois Art Gallery, Lehigh University, PA
1981
Drawings, Rosemont College, Rosemont, PA
1980
Drawings and Burial Artifacts, Stockton State College,
NJ
Selected Group Exhibitions
1986
Pertaining to Philadelphia: Works on Paper from the 70's and
80's, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
American Graphic Arts: Watercolors, Drawings and Prints from
the Collection of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,
Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Works on Paper III, Dolan/Maxwell Gallery,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Still Life in 2 and 3 Dimensions, Art in City Hall, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
1985
Golden Years: 50 Year Alumni Invitational, Tyler School
of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
An Inside Place, Noyes Museum, Oceanville, New Jersey
1984
Contemporary Works on Paper, Frumkin and Struve Gallery,
Chicago, IL
Selections 27, Drawing Center, New York
Philadelphia Drawing Competition, Philadelphia Art Alliance,
first prize, Philadelphia, PA
21st Biennial Exhibition, University of Delaware, purchase
prize, Newark, DE
1983
Five Years of Fleisher Challenge Exhibitions, Philadelphia
Art Alliance, Philadelphia, PA
1982
10th Annual Works on Paper, Second Street Gallery, Charlottesville, VA
1981
5th International Drawing Biennale, England
American Drawing, Royal College of Art, England
1980
Challenge Exhibition, Fleisher Art Memorial, Philadelphia,
PA
1979
Small Works on Paper, Newcastle Museum, England
Bibliography
Burton Wasserman, "Galleries," Camden Courier
Post, August 14, 1979. Victoria Donohoe, "The Nude: As Abstract Declines, Realism
Returns," Philadelphia Inquirer, August 10, 1980.
Penny Baker,"A Delightful, Absurd History," Atlantic
County Sunday Press, September, 1980
Edward J. Sozanski, "Art of Drawing Thriving Nicely,'' Philadelphia
Inquirer, May 10, 1983. Penny Baker, "Shecky, A Phantom of the Theatre," Atlantic
County Sunday Press, May 15,1983. Burton Wasserman, "Exhibitions in Sight," Art Matters,
June, 1983. Sid Sachs, "Stephen Talasnik: Philadelphia Art Alliance,"
New Art Examiner, December, 1983. Victoria Donohoe, "On Galleries,'' Philadelphia Inquirer,
February 25,1984. Edward J. Sozanski, "On Galleries," Philadelphia
Inquirer, December 20, 1984. Victoria Donohoe, "Tyler Exhibit Showcases Its Alumni,"
Philadelphia Inquirer, January 26, 1985. Edward J. Sozanski, "On Galleries," Philadelphia
Inquirer, March 28,1985. Judith Heep. "Stephen Talasnik: Janet Fleisher Gallery,"
Art Matters, April, 1985. Edward J. Sozanski, "A Varied Exhibit at the Noyes,"
Philadelphia Inquirer, July 4,1985. William Zimmer, "Enigmatic Interiors at the Noyes," New
York Times, August 25,1985. Victoria Donohoe, "5 Artists with New Approaches," Philadelphia
Inquirer, July 18,1986. Edward J. Sozanski, "Art Among the Stacks,'' Philadelphia
Inquirer, October 4,1986.
The Morris Gallery displays the work of outstanding contemporary
artists with a connection to Philadelphia, determined by birth,
schooling, or residence, The exhibitions are chosen by a committee
composed of area artists, museum personnel, and collectors, and
the curatorial staff of the Pennsylvania Academy. Currently serving
on the Morris Gallery Exhibition Committee are: Cynthia Carlson,
Paolo Colombo, Bill Freeland, Faith Ginsburg, Dr. Helen Herrick,
Cheryl McClenney, Carrie Rickey, Eileen Rosenau, Judith Tannenbaum;
Academy staff Judith Stein, Morris Gallery Coordinator, Frank Goodyear,
Jr., Linda Bantel, Kathleen Foster, and Academy students Anna Yates
and Treacy Ziegler.
Copyright, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia,
1987
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