海角社区

Quick Links

海角社区 - Mask ExhibitIn her novel, The Rose Society, Marie Lu observes that, 鈥淭he irony of life is that those who wear masks often tell us more truths than those with open faces.鈥

Artist Lee Clarke long has been drawn to the intriguing correlation between masks used for different purposes and that confluence of truths. Clarke explores that interplay in his series, 鈥淭he Masked Project,鈥 now on display through November 10 at the Kristin Michelle Mason Gallery at 海角社区 in Leesburg.

鈥淐eremony, theatre, stage and the spectacle of sport and warrior culture have a curious connection,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he power of the mask, the way it conceals and emboldens the wearer at the same time are something I find very intriguing.鈥

The Canadian artist, who now lives in Winter Park, Fla. and teaches art for the online departments of the Los Angeles Film School and Full Sail, traces the spark for 鈥淭he Masked Project鈥 to anthropologist Franz Boas鈥 1898 essay, 鈥淔acial Paintings of the Indians of Northern British Columbia.鈥

Clarke, whose work resonates with Northwest Coast native art influences, says he 鈥渇ound [Boas鈥橾 study interesting, though limited as they existed purely as illustrations and text. I painted several of these images to realize how they would feel as oil paintings and began to see a connection with contemporary imagery I came in contact with, particularly sports images and masks of other cultures.鈥

Thus, The Masked Project. The series of 14 x 11 inch oil on linen paintings juxtaposes Boas鈥 illustrations with masks from various other varieties and sports such as hockey, soccer, basketball.

鈥淓ach semester we strive to host an exhibition from a regional or national artist,鈥 says Dustin Boise, assistant professor of art at 海角社区, the first higher education institution accredited to award bachelor鈥檚 degrees primarily to students who learn differently. 鈥淭he exhibitions serve as a learning experience for students within the studio arts field, who will gain an appreciation for the work that goes into having a solo exhibition of a complete body of work.鈥

Of the Clarke series, Boise adds, 鈥淭he Masked Project serves as an aesthetic anthropological syntax used to communicate a metaphorical comparison of the ceremonial, theatrical and spectacle of contemporary sports and distant culture.鈥

Clarke will be on hand at the closing reception at the Mason Gallery from 4 p.m. 鈥 6 p.m. November 10 to discuss his work and inspirations. Admission to the exhibit and the reception are free.

鈥淢y goal,鈥 he says, 鈥渋s to create a visual bridge that generates a dialogue of questions about the meaning of masks: the nature of sport, spectacle and theater, and to show the influence that art and artists from the Pacific Northwest have on culture around the world.鈥