 |  | HOLIDAY GUIDE 2007 |
| | Judith Schaechter | Aw-some Art
Devil monkeys, crocheted skulls and heartbreak made achingly sweet.  by Roberta Fallon

Cute is the current art darling, pushed mostly by young artists but also some
midcareer folks like Jeff Koons, who knew before the rest of us that irony would one day
turn stale. Koons’ Puppy—a massive Chia Pet seen ’round the world—was
loved by the general public and art insiders alike. Its arrival signaled that cute
puppies were in and sourpusses could take a hike.
Cute is hip. We can’t move for paintings, sculptures and depictions of animals, toys
and children flush with pretty colors and nostalgia for simpler times. Fueled by
underground comics and zines, children’s books and the ascendance of craft, embroidery
and drawing, this stream of young art embraces magic and innocence and eschews
psychological depths.
Art Star Boutique has been surfing cute here in Philly since it opened. The forlorn
children, cute animals and innocent creatures that appear in their exhibitions are
affordable yummies that exist in a world that sticks a cute, furry finger up at the last
100 years of art history. This art’s ancestors are the Pre-Raphaelites, whose depictions
of children, beautiful women, rainbows and bucolic England were early-Victorian cuteness
incarnate.
Art Star’s online store is full of affordable art, like Andrew Porter’s $20 monkey
prints—small, matted and ready for framing. They show Paul Frank-like animals costumed
as Batman, the devil, Mr. Spock and a host of other pop icons. The prints have a nice
graphic sensibility and a sweetness that’s self-aware and comfortable. This is art
suitable for youngsters, adolescents and anyone starting an art collection.
Art Star’s crocheted wall pieces by Brooklyn artist Emily Barletta are
wonderful small works that reference nature and cells in a whimsical way, and their
affordability (prices peak at $4,000, but some are in the $300 range) is inviting. The
boutique’s upcoming holiday show will feature many cute items that could make smart
presents.
Etsy, the online art community for showing and selling art, is also
onboard with affordable DIY cute. A recent visit to the site turned up a crocheted
dinosaur skull for $100 and a Darth Vader embroidered Christmas ornament for $5.95.
For someone who likes art but doesn’t know where to begin collecting, cute is a great,
mistake-free and affordable introduction. Artists who make cute often have backgrounds
in illustration and are accomplished in narrative depictions. Their works are nicely
crafted, wall-ready (framed or matted) and for the most part, small and affordable. And
collecting handmade art puts money in the hands of small local businesses and the
artists themselves.
Cute art is gentle and self-absorbed. Sometimes it’s tinged with sadness and longing,
but it’s always cute first.
A hybrid stream of cute—one that puts psychological depths first and cute second—is
apparent in the art of two outstanding woman artists, Mexican artist Frida
Kahlo and Philly’s Judith Schaechter. These two practitioners of
scorched-earth cuteness use the tropes of cute (magic, fairy tales, the forlorn heroine)
but take the plunge into sex and death, transgression and violence. This is cute that’s
grown up.
The traveling blockbuster exhibit “Frida Kahlo”—opening Feb. 20 at the Philadelphia
Museum of Art—is a wonderful opportunity to explore Kahlo’s salty ourvre. Meanwhile, the
stained-glass art of Judith Schaechter can be seen close up in Schaechter’s book
Extra Virgin, published by local publisher Free News Projects
(founded by Space 1026’s Max Lawrence). This is an achingly beautiful coffeetable book
with crisp, mouth-watering renditions of Schaechter’s art.
Art that takes cute to the next snarly level is practiced by international art star
Kara Walker. Walker uses parody and satire to punch holes in cute. She
uses the Victorian-era technique of cut-paper silhouettes to create sexy, scatological
vignettes about slavery in the antebellum South. Her works are sly; they’re beautiful
and accomplished but they sting. Their greatest asset is that they treat the past as a
metaphor for the present and hit hard against the status quo. Walker’s message that
we’re still paying for the legacy of slavery is bitter medicine delivered with sugar.
Space 1026 member (and PW contributing writer) Jayson Scott
Musson snarls like a caffeinated adolescent in his super-charged word art
about race relations and relationships in general. Musson’s posters are like Walker’s
art: Their bite is sharp and the message is: “No, mom, the kids are not okay.”
Art history giants like Rembrandt, Frans Hals, Renoir and van Gogh knew the importance
of making pictures of lovely, cute things like babies and flowers. Not only do we love
those things for real, but we love their representations and will happily put them on
our walls. Cute might just be the universal antidote for what ails the world.
Emily Barletta: “My Biology”
Through Nov. 17. Art Star Gallery and Boutique, 1030 N. Second St., unit 301.
215.238.1557.
artstarphilly.com
Etsy
www.etsy.com
headline:
Extra Virgin: The Stained Glass of Judith Schaechter
Free News Projects. $65.95. www.freenewsprojects.com
“Frida Kahlo”
Opens Tues., Feb. 20, 10am. $10-$14. Through May 18. Philadelphia Museum of Art, 26th
St. and the Pkwy. 215.684.7931. www.philamuseum.org
Jayson Scott Musson
www.jaysonmusson.com
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