Good Graces

Chuck Connelly is an exceptional painter.  His show at the New Arts Gallery on a country road several miles outside Litchfield is fascinating, often stunning.

   Connelly was once a rising star.  After graduating from art school in the late 1970s, he attracted the attention of Dr. Robert C. Atkins — yes, he of the diet — who sent Connelly to Germany to study.  Back in New York City after two years, he quickly received his first show and — along with Julian Schnabel and Jean-Michel Basquiat — was hailed as the future of American art.

   But that was not to be.  By 1989, when Martin Scorsese used Connelly (played by Nick Nolte) as the inspiration for “Life Lessons,â€� his 10-minute contribution to “New York Stories,â€� the artist was on the brink of a spectacular descent.  He criticized Scorsese publicly, excoriated the whole “businessâ€� of art and found himself abandoned, drinking and alone after his wife left him. But he never stopped painting.

   In June 2008, filmmaker Jeff Stimmel premiered “The Art of Failure:  Chuck Connelly Not for Sale,â€� a documentary chronicling the artist’s fall from grace.  It is an honest, brutal picture:  Connelly drinks, bellows, wallows in self pity, recovers and paints.

   Terry Carretta, New Arts Gallery director, joined HBO — which aired “Art of Failureâ€� last fall — in giving Connelly his first show in nearly 20 years.  It was so successful that Connelly is back with both new paintings and older work he and Carretta selected together.

   The pictures are powerful. A 2009 self-portrait is uncompromising in its directness: The artist looks at us straight on, his face still handsome, his eyes set as if daring us not to accept him on his own terms.

   “The A Team [team Connelly],â€� another new work, is the largest and most expensive ($60,000) in the show. Seventeen men are arranged, as in an athletic-team photograph, some in military tunics, some in sweatshirts emblazoned with a “Câ€� around a central figure, obviously Connelly.  The picture is dark, brooding; the men have nearly blacked-out eyes; it’s a team of ghosts.

   Three small portraits of Andy Warhol (like Connelly, from Pittsburgh) are haunting:  the passive face, the hint of a gentle smile, the knowing eyes. And there are some remarkable portraits of women, especially “Woman in Polka Dotsâ€� as sensual as a nude.

   Connelly’s work is not figurative only. His landscapes and still lifes are powerful compositions of thick paint and deep, heavy colors.  “Striped Hillsâ€� are just that:  broad stripes of red and yellow, curving and rising, crossed by deep green ribbons that seem to fold on themselves like ribbon candy. “Still Lifeâ€� from 2008 is composed of painter’s striped brush pots on a table around  potted  yellow-orange mums, all set against an open window.  It’s muscular with great depth from the thick layers of paint. Somewhat Van Gogh.

   But my favorite picture is “The Studioâ€�, from 2005.  Nearly six feet square, this is a  colorful painting of Connelly’s workspace, jammed with paint pots, brush pots, finished pictures, rags, a garbage container, rolls of canvas, even a bird near the open window in the center, this is the room of a man obsessed with painting.  Stare at the picture a while and it begins to move hypnotically.

   And Connelly is a man of self-knowledge and humor, too:  “Bottle Church,â€� 1998, is a monumental, half-full liquor bottle set outdoors against a morning sky and topped with a haloed cross.

   Incidentally, Connelly’s paintings here are priced from $14,000 to $60,000.

 

     

     “The Art of Chuck Connellyâ€� is at New Arts Gallery, 513 Maple St., Litchfield, and runs through Nov. 22.  The gallery is open Friday-Monday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call 860-567-5015.  

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