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Originally appeared in Artforum, January 1992, p. 108 KEITH MORRISON Considering the current interest in art focusing on ideological, political, and multicultural issues, Keith Morrison's paintings were both timely and instructive - timely because of their socially relevant theme, and instructive because of Morrison's reluctance to sacrifice esthetic or philosophical substance in the service of overt polemics. In the watercolor Hat Ladies, 1989, Morrison, who is from Jamaica, employs a touch of humor in combining African and Christian themes, by placing three brightly decorated hats on an open Bible. These hats - the kind worn by black women on their way to church -symbolize the religious faith of African-American women, their steadfast journey to church functions as a subtle metaphor for the black struggle more generally. Banana Republic, 1989, a watercolor from the same year, features brightly colored refuse -boxes and books of matches, banana peels, etc. - scattered on the ground to symbolize the careless plundering, by First World corporations, of Third World countries.
Two still-lifes entitled Night in Tunisia and Vanitas (both 1991), differ in theme, yet they show a similar concern for color and compositional invention. While reminiscent of the still-lifes of Audrey Flack, Vanitas replaces Flack's commercial color and harsh, photographic light with a warmer, richer palette. Atop a red dressing table strewn with jewelry and cosmetics, a green parrot, attempting to impress an onlooking pigeon, "dances" atop an orange hand-mirror, creating a whimsical scene.
The idea for the composition, according to Morrison, came from Peter Sellars' version of Mozart's opera Don Giovanni, entitled Mozart-DaPonte Cyc1e, 1989, a production set in the shells of empty Bronx buildings in which Mozart's feast becomes a cocaine-shooting party. What Morrison has done is to extract from Mozart's 18th-century opera the universal themes of lust and morality, freedom and addiction, life and death. His figures, while contemporary, participate in a drama that is not unique to any specific culture or time. Like Mozart, Morrison presents the dilemma of human beings at the brink of the abyss, about to be devoured by their own frailties and vices. - Howard Risatti |