Arthur Cohen at Jack The Pelican Presents
In his typical fashion, Cohen loves to skewer himself, but saves a modicum of grace for his alter-ego. Sunim looks completely at home on the rope, as if he were just pausing in the garden with his fan, or taking a leisurely jaunt down the boulevard. It would be sensible to ascribe his comfortability to his role as a Buddhist teacher, following the ideal of giving up possession of one’s body, and all of the problems that go with it. Since we have no body, there is no gravity.
While distracting the viewer with the
metaphysical conundrum of a man suspended on the end of a rope, Cohen
also charms us with his talent. He has a great love of the human form as
swathed in different types of clothes, from bright blue athletic
jumpsuits to a patchwork of rags transformed into a monk’s robes. He is
conscious that a thin veil of appearances is just another way to reveal
states of consciousness, as was similarly achieved by two other
painterly fashionistas, Edouard Vuillard and Gustav Klimpt. In everyday
life we are taught to revel in overt detail, and to judge people by what
they wear, even down to the combination of hues and the stitching of
every piece of apparel. In his self-portraits there is evidence of a
foolish anti-hero, a harlequin strutting upon the stage of life; and
beside him the deft and mute Sunim, a hero for the preposessed, a master
of focus, and a symbol of beauty.
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