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Deep Shit by Eric Beltz

Eric Beltz (1975) The exquisitely rendered graphite drawings are sophisticated responses to American folkways and myths. As darkly funny as they are disarmingly earnest, the graphic works are both exhortations and critiques of our nation’s inborn exceptionalism and romanticism. The preservationists’ dualistic attitude (i.e., Humanity vs. Nature) provides only simple answers to our complex questions. By contrast, Beltz’s allegorical drawings shirk simplistic moralizing in favor of contradiction, ambivalence and multiplicity. His scenes speak to an active communion with Nature, albeit one that includes suffering, death and a melancholy nod to the essential absurdity of existence.

Appropriately, Beltz’s drawings incorporate Biblical texts and his subjects are recognizable as America’s founding fathers and God-fearing, anonymous farmers. But Beltz draws from a peculiarly American well, the proverbial melting pot. Each drawing is suffused with currents of Eastern philosophy and shamanism. His farmers and historical figures are also mystics.

Beltz’s meticulously rendered works don’t offer any answers, but neither do they shrug off the dilemma. With a richly ironic sensibility and a sensitivity to the complexities of our national character and (natural) history, Beltz embraces our clusterfuck approach even as he skewers it. “The Good Land” is sublimely ambivalent. (via myartspace)

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2 Responses to “Deep Shit by Eric Beltz”

  1. herrschobel said:

    great choice…exactly my kind of deep shit !

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  2. [...]Deep Shit by Eric Beltz[...]

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