On the art page in the Weekly is my review of the Thomas Chimes retrospective at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Below is the copy with some pictures. For more photos see my flickr set.
Chimes Ringing on Museum Hill
A Philly artist gets his due.
Chimes came up at a time when gestural abstraction was in vogue. His genius was to reject the fashion and paint his own inner passion. From the beginning the artist embraced signs and symbols. Early on, the symbols seemed to come from his heritage, with crosses and stylized letters from the Greek alphabet. These works, which evoke not only Matisse but also the black-edged obsessive works of Swiss outsider artist Adolph Wolfli, are bold and take no prisoners. They don’t mean to be likable, but they are. They’re also highly energetic and engaging.
During World War II the artist fixed fighter planes and became accomplished with metals. And his 1970s art reflects this with a series of box-like metal assemblages that include painted components. These works, a couple of which remind me of Joseph Cornell boxes, are playful, and reference both the world of machines and electronics as well as the human body, creating a man-machine conflation that may be an homage to another Chimes hero, Marcel Duchamp. (Duchamp’s Nude Descending a Staircase and Large Glass both depict the mechanized human.)
“The Entropy Paintings”
Through April 14. Free. Locks Gallery, 600 Washington Sq. South. 215.629.1000.