A Peek Inside Peter Steiner’s Mind

You wonder how Peter Steiner does it all: cartoonist, novelist, artist, blogger. Now a small exhibition of work from this compulsively busy man is at the Norfolk Library through March 1. It is a fascinating show of highs (and a few lows) and of obsession with repeated subjects. Rarely are we shown so much of an artist’s mind.

Steiner has taken full advantage of the library’s quirky but splendid interior. Once inside you are met with a group of large, blazingly colorful oils. A single “Copper Beech” tree fills the canvas with menacing limbs. Next to it, “Airborne” shows a hay wagon from an odd perspective that makes it seem to be suspended in the midst of fiery reds, oranges and greens.

At the circulation desk, you can chuckle at an original illustration from Steiner’s graphic novel, “An Atheist in Heaven.” (A limited edition of 100 of the illustration, all hand-drawn, numbered and signed, is available for sale.)

Along both sides of the hallway leading to the library’s magnificent main room, original cartoons from The New Yorker magazine (Steiner’s “On the Internet, no one knows you’re a dog” is the most reproduced cartoon in the magazine’s history) and small oils hang on the ends of the bookshelves that line the hall. A few pictures show imagined hay fields, again in reds.

Steiner’s work has the most impact in large pictures hanging in the main room, pictures which show alternate versions of the same subjects. Five oils of an “Old Man Dancing” are urgent, as if they were painted quickly and energetically to suggest movement. One, subtitled “Renaissance,” is very good: a mostly white skeletal figure is highlighted with strokes of greens, blues and purples against a dark background. It has a medieval quality. Another, subtitled “Black,” is unusual among the five old man paintings: the figure is shown from the rear, his torso almost realistic in pale yellows, purples, blues and a Day-Glo fluorescent green on a dark black/purple background.

There are two pictures of haying. The best one is “Hay Elevator” with its out-of-kilter angles on the hay barn, chartreuse hay bales and surprising multicolored clapboards on the end of the barn. It is a busy, satisfying work.

Then there is “Vultures.” At some point in his painting career — he began making art in the 1970s — Steiner concentrated on self-portraits that were anguished, as if he were in pain or danger. The Peter Steiner in “Vultures,” on the other hand, is calm, composed, just as Steiner is in life. Of course the enormous vulture perched on his shirtless left shoulder is jarring, but it too seems calm and composed, just waiting. It is the finest picture in the show.

The show continues at the Norfolk Library through March 1. Call 860-542-1795 or go to www.norfolklibrary.org.

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