Saturday, December 11, 2021 at 09:53AM
Gar Waterman

Pest Control

William Kent: Prints       Gar Waterman: Sculpture

KLG Gallery, February 10 – March 13      2022

William Kent was a Connecticut artist I got to know several years before he died in 2012 - quite an irascible character, very political work, remarkable sculptor and printmaker with a style that was anything but subtle - heavy irony delivered with stark humor, societal idiocies reduced with relish to graphic conundrums.  Nabakov believed Kafka’s Metamorphosis to be about the artist's struggle for existence in a society full of philistines intent on destroying him step by step, a point of view that echoed Bill Kent’s own relationship with the art world and may have had something to do with the frequent appearance of insects in his work. Pest Control features a selection of Bill’s insect inspired carved slate prints along with my sculpture, including the new Coleottolo series featuring beetles on flame cut steel plate drops in a juxtaposition of organic and architectural that reflects my belief that nature will endure past our own brief tenure here on Earth.

There are a number of species of wood boring beetles killing millions of trees in several regions of the country right now. Here in the East, we have Emerald ash boring beetles – out west you will find, among others, the Western pine beetle and the Deathwatch beetle, all leaving massive swathes of dead timber in their wake. Milder winters limit insect populations less effectively, so the infestations are getting worse. We regard these creatures as pests when their numbers and dietary habits don’t coincide with our own interests, but there is a clear environmental irony present here: the beetles wreaking havoc on our forests are simply doing what they do – like us, they are opportunists. However, the human race is the unequivocal master of destruction on this planet, with a 7 billion plus population devouring finite resources in a fossil fueled rush towards a catastrophically warmed world. We have only to look in the mirror to glimpse Gregor Samsa and identify the real pest on the planet.

Article originally appeared on Gar Waterman - Sculpture - New Haven, Connecticut (http://garwaterman.com/).
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