Art from ephemera in Hannah show

SHARON — “Imagine a 62-year-old man on his hands and knees riffling through boxes of old books, in a quest for discolored Scotch tape.” This is Duncan Hannah describing himself and smiling. He’s talking about the search that has resulted in the beguiling work of art he is showing me. It is one of the pieces he has chosen for a show he calls “Pulp” – a collection of his collages that will be on exhibit at the Hotchkiss Library of Sharon from Aug. 9 to Oct. 2. Perhaps you are wondering how discolored Scotch tape can be beguiling. On its own, of course, it isn’t. It’s the way this accomplished artist manages to transform an eclectic collection of paper and printing ephemera into something completely different — bold, arresting, graphic and meaningful. Hannah “sees” paper materials in a different way than the rest of us. Not as tape or type or photographs or newsprint, but as shapes, complementary colors, juxtaposed images that allow the viewer to look at the subject in a unique way —to “re-contextualize” (Hannah’s word) and thereby infuse the finished work with new life. A self-described “magpie who scavenges flotsam from the past,” Hannah haunts library book sales for source material. He scours discarded volumes, magazines, newspapers for images. Also for the stock, the end papers, the textures of a printed page. Then he selects and assembles — and waits. “Sometimes I have to wait for the collage to reveal itself,” he said. “First I put together a visual that is pleasing to me. If it is, I have to trust that it will communicate an interesting narrative.” A traditional painter, Hannah finds collage liberating. “Painting is slow and arduous. One must build to the finished piece. Collage is spontaneous and fluid.” His collages have been featured in the Paris Review, The New York Times, New York magazine, Esquire and other publications. A reflection of his personal interests in literature, film, travel, art history, they have also been used for book and album covers as well as extensively purchased by J. Crew for display in their upscale stores around the world. As for his paintings, Hannah has had more than 60 one-man shows in the United States and around the world. His work is in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Minneapolis Museum of Art, as well as the private collections of George Clooney, Mick Jagger, Philip Taaffe, Anna Sui, Linda Nochlin, George Condo, Ray Learsy and the late Allen Ginsberg.His home is also featured in the new book by Mary Randolph Carter, “Never Stop to Think... Do I Have a Place for This,” which the author will sign at the annual book signing at the library on Friday, Aug. 1.An opening reception with wine and cheese and a chance to meet and talk to the artist will be held at the library on Saturday, Aug. 9, from 5 to 7 p.m. For more information, call 860-364-5041 or go to the website at www.hotchkisslibrary.org.

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