Art - as a homework assignment

The current art show at the Hotchkiss Library of Sharon—another in a series begun last spring — was curated by KK Kozik, an artist based in Brooklyn and Sharon. For “Bibliophilia,� she asked artists to loan works influenced by libraries, books, reading — anything literary. Be careful of what you ask for.

Clearly many artists found little inspiration in the theme. The show is weak and mostly cliched. Even good painters such as Kozik herself have produced lackluster, limp work. Her “Novella� — a young woman sitting in a swing reading against a background of trees and shrubbery and orange sky — is cloying. How different from her large surreal painting of a man on a terrace overlooking the sea in the library’s first show.

Colleen McGuire’s “The Readerâ€� is mediocre at best:  The New York Times lies under a stack of books on a table. So what?  McGuire’s painting of the Sharon Shell Station at night was a highlight of that first show — haunting, mysterious. This picture is a throwaway.

There is some good work on display. Katia Santibanez, a favorite of Morgan Lehman Gallery, has loaned two pieces on paper:  “The Lost Readers (Homage to Proust)â€� and “The Red and the Black (Stendhal)â€� are vigorous, narrative abstracts.

Six drawings on printed paper by Austin Thomas are interesting and well done if a little precious. Thomas draws grids of lines — some black, some in colors — over printed news photographs from The New York Times. Her work seems to comment on the stories behind the photos. Some are fascinating.

There are interesting pieces from Deborah Brown, a Brooklyn painter of urban landscapes, and unusual ones from Marilla Palmer, who creates collages that include natural objects with references to great authors including Voltaire and Tolstoy.

Best are three small pieces by Duncan Hannah from his “Fictions� series of period Pelican and Penguin paperback covers. Using oil, shellac and pencil on paper, Hannah brings his romantic, nostalgic sensibility to these seemingly simple works. Somehow the irregularity of his brush and pencil work make new statements about the books themselves. Hannah is a fascinating painter.

“Bibliophilia� continues at the Hotchkiss Library in Sharon through Sept. 30. Hours are Mon., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Tues., noon to 7 p.m.; Wed. to Fri., 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Sat., 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. (860) 364-5041

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