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Past TenseTwo artists squeeze the good out of the good ol' days.By Theresa BembnisterPublished on April 03, 2003Thrift stores and attics aren't the only places to find antique kitsch anymore. Happy housewives and other aged cultural icons have been popping up in contemporary art for quite some time now -- it's easy for disenchanted 21st-century audiences to get a quick laugh out of the hunky-dory images of yesteryear. By this point, however -- especially as ad agencies jump back on their old bandwagons -- such recycled imagery frequently fails to evoke nostalgia or irony and instead just creates a sense of ennui. Live Wires and Pacifiers: Amusements, Both Educational and Cautionary at the Green Door Gallery, features the work of two artists who draw inspiration from advertising and pop images of the past. Kansas Citian Lori Raye Erickson incorporates 1940s, '50s, and '60s magazine clippings into twenty candy-colored, lavishly textured paintings and collages. Boston artist Jen Fridy bases her thirteen morbidly themed and carefully fabricated paintings on illustrations and designs from the 1920s and '30s. Although Erickson has a background in graphic design, that's not why she's interested in vintage advertisements. "I don't know why exactly I'm attracted to the '40s, '50s and '60s images," she admits. But she views them as humorous and innocent and often plays with those concepts. In "Sharing Is Caring," Erickson recreates an old illustration in which an apron-wearing mother washes dishes with her daughter and son. Erickson twists the scene, replacing regular plates and utensils with large butcher knives. Beyond the crop of the illustration, though, is a beautiful, pink-and-charcoal-colored background, cracked and peeling. The flatly painted kitchen scene is a stark contrast to the rough-and-tumble texture of the treated-wood background. "I find things -- old things," Erickson says. "[I have] lots of piles. Not just one -- several. Hundreds, probably thousands." They're piles of stuff she's discovered on the street or in antique stores as well as personal objects, like the teeth she used in "Brush Correctly" and "Toof." For both of these pieces, Erickson uses a cheap, canvas-board background and paints a brightly smiling child, then pastes on vintage ads for dental-care products along with a human tooth. Erickson's nephew lost the baby tooth; the molar with the silver dental work came from her own mouth. The weirdest item in Erickson's collection sounds like a prop from the movie Frankenweenie. One of Erickson's friends asked her veterinarian to save her dog's eyeball after a surgery; she then gave it to Erickson in a glass jar. Erickson isn't sure how she'll use the eyeball. She begins creating artwork with a loose idea of the aesthetic outcome, but much of her process involves experimentation. "Bufferin Bottle filled with Ball Bearings in Black Box" incorporates an array of "B" items from Erickson's junk piles: a picture of a Volkswagen Beetle, wrapping paper decorated with Bugs Bunny, a photograph of a girl wearing a beehive hairdo and baring her boobies for all to see. In "Goosey, Goosey, Gander," Erickson conveys something more personal. Here, she's affixed yellowed sheet music -- a gift from a cherished older friend -- to a wooden board riddled with tiny metal rivets and painted with brisk swipes of pink and blue; a pattern of yellow and white spray-painted polka dots covers the bottom. Illustrating the nursery-rhyme lyrics are a sketchy line drawing of a songbird on its perch and a black-and-white rendition of a stairway. A mechanical device behind the board chimes a tune when viewers press a button. These two pieces employ vintage imagery in a more introspective and creative manner than much of Erickson's other work in Live Wires and Pacifiers, moving beyond the cheap laugh of overly familiar '40s, '50s and '60s icons. Jen Fridy says she enjoys "the surreality" of old advertising, especially when it's for products no longer on the market. "These odd things were made to fill a niche and eventually faded out of existence," Fridy says. What Fridy calls "cool old stuff" includes Art Nouveau posters, wartime propaganda, underground comics, old children's books and board games. But unlike Erickson's pleasing pop images, Fridy's paintings are dark and morbid. "I've got a bit of an unhealthy obsession with things that scare me," Fridy explains. "Shipwrecks, curses, spontaneous combustion, awful things jumping out of dark places ... I've noticed lately that seems to come though in a lot of the art." Her "Public Service Announcement" warns viewers in scripty, black-and-yellow hand lettering that "bad luck can take many forms" and offers ominous but helpful advice: "don't be caught unawares." Using watercolorlike glazes, Fridy depicts a young girl in a yellow dress and kneesocks who has come across a black cat. Below that appears an image out of traveling carnival posters -- a malicious face sporting a huge, elongated smirk. Inside its rubbery lips appear four unlucky vignettes: the hand of a drowning victim futilely grasping above the water, orange flames leaping from a burning building, a heart pierced by arrows, and a canary lying dead behind the brass bars of its cage. (It's possible that a black cat could cross viewers' paths while they're contemplating Fridy's artwork; four such creatures live at the Green Door Gallery.)
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