Life Lines

For those who love cartoons, and I suspect many do, there are two interesting shows available — one close to home, one farther away.

   Up in Becket, MA, the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival has mounted “A Dance to Jules Feiffer,â€� an exhibition of 46 works by the Pulitzer Prize-winning artist. This is Feiffer’s view of movement and expression. There are cartoon strips, watercolors, political commentaries with dance imagery.  Feiffer, who is 80 years old, said long ago, “gesture is what my work is all about.â€�  But this is the first in-depth survey of his portrayal of movement.

   Most of the works are originals, although some signed, limited edition prints are included.

   Nearer, the Washington Art Association is presenting “The Provocative Line,â€� featuring the widely known work of Barry Blitt, Dan Wasserman and Bill Griffith.  These artists are descendants of Thomas Nast, who famously satirized and lampooned New York City’s Tammany Hall gang.

   Blitt is best known for more than 50 New Yorker covers, including his 2006 “Deluged,â€� which won the Best Cover of the Year award from the Magazine Editors’ Society. You probably know him from Time, or Rolling Stone, or from Frank Rich’s column, which Blitt illustrates in the Sunday Times.

   You’ll recognize Wasserman because of his cartoons in the Wall Street Journal and The Boston Globe, where he is editorial cartoonist.  

   Griffith, on the other hand, draws a syndicated comic strip, “Zippy the Pinhead,â€� which appears in more than 200 newspapers.  Zippy is a somewhat cleaned-up version of Griffith’s original character, the very angry Mr. The Toad, a regular character in the East Village Other newspaper of the 1970s.

   All of the pieces shown — and you can get a lot of cartoons into one show — are satirical, some charmingly so, some down and dirty.  But they are milestones to over 35 years of American politics and social turmoil.  You’ll be fascinated, I think.

    If sculpture is your thing, drive up to Stockbridge, MA, where “Sculpture Now in Stockbrige 2009â€� displays 18 large-scale, outdoor pieces on lawns along Main Street. There’s an air-driven kinetic sculpture (“Moonbeams, Pandora,â€�)  that never stops moving, a single downed tree (“Ice Storm ’08â€�) transformed into a bench and “Polar Bear,â€� a vivid  creature in full stride.  Some of the artists are local, some national and better known.  There are even two pieces from art students at Monument Mountain Regional High School in collaboration with their instructors.

   Summer traffic in Stockbridge is so bad you may want to park in a town lot and stroll along Main Street to see the works.  They are fun.

   The Feiffer exhibit continues through Aug. 30. 413-243-9919.

   The cartoonists’ show runs through August. 860-868-2878.

     

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