Brian Fekete’s “Ganesh Ruminates” is a large 50 x 38 inch framed gouache and ink painting on paper. A highly decorative overall pattern in golden oranges and sunny yellows grounds the central composition, a distorted and stretched image of an elephant’s head rendered in a precise style of a printed historical zoological illustration in black and white - albeit one that has been distorted. Fekete paints the elephant’s head viewed from the front and back, in side-by-side simultaneity, as though inviting us to slide through space and time. A third black and white image in the lower right quadrant shows a cross-section of the elephant’s skull, seen from above. The title derives from the Hindu elephant-headed god of good fortune, remover of obstacles, and considered to be a patron of arts, science and letters. Deep seated curiosity and interest in a vast shared human history marked by a desire to categorize and thus to know our world, drives this artist’s work.
Fekete states, “The motivations and methodologies typical of much of my work are concerned with creating new formal as well as metaphorical contexts for found and appropriated imagery. Employing a wide range of wet, dry, and collaged media, the sources of this imagery are as far flung as zoology and theology, body parts and auto parts. It has been slowly and methodically collected over many years. It is often manipulated, recombined and distorted utilizing relatively low tech photomechanical (xerographic) processes which produce random results not easily dictated or controlled by the artist. Limited control is a desired consequence which forces the artist to make decisions within the parameters of the individual outcomes of process. These resulting distortions and re-combinations pose many possibilities for abstraction and visual readings not intended for the original image. They also place the images in entirely new and sometimes unsettling contexts, ripe for personal commentary, thus, reinterpretation on various levels (i.e. political, religious and psychological). In some depictions, science, nature and technology may be observed collaborating in unison. One by one images are selected and grouped, often incongruously, then varying shifts in scale are introduced with a projector, building a uniquely distinct personal mythology and visual vocabulary. My objective is to present refreshing new settings for psychological tableaux and phenomenological scenarios through formal language by injecting otherwise neutral imagery with layers of new meaning.”
Now settled and working in Kingston, NY, Brian Fekete reached the Hudson Valley by way of Brooklyn and Detroit, where he was born in 1955. There, he received his BFA and MFA degrees, before moving to Brooklyn in 1997. Fekete has been awarded fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts, Wayne State University, and grants from the Michigan Council for the Arts. His work can be seen in the collection of the Detroit Institute of Arts, as well as numerous public and private collections, both in the US and abroad.
This work is presented in a whitewashed wood frame.