June Rise Ramble Hills Snyder: New Work in Montana March 26 – April 26, 1987 Custer County Art Center Miles City, Montana Nobody knows, from sea to shining sea, why we are having all this trouble with our republic. --- Thomas McGuane Rolling Target, Incurator, Dashboard Sandwich, Genre Jumper, Pilot Hole, Ranch O’ The Beings In Flux, Church of The Utterly Orthoparadox, Garage Optimism, Erewhon Is Almost Nowhere Backwards, Minotaur Is The Maze, June Rise Ramble… It is all these things that make you mine. --- The Uniques, at The Village Swinger, Lubbock, Texas, Ca. 1967 Rumble, dumble, crumble… --- Max Snyder Of Thieves, Kings and Wanderers By Laurie Rufe More than a century ago, an enterprising Texas named Dudley H. Snyder left his imprint on a burgeoning cattle empire that extended from the Pecos top the vast plains and basins of Colorado, Wyoming and Montana. He carved a noble legacy of intoxicating imagery that became a portal to discovery for Hills Snyder, an artist-descendent. Parallel paths, yet separate planes of vision, mark the journals of D.H. and his great-grandson; forever intertwining, forever asunder. The baron exclaimed, “The profit is not made when you sell the horse, but when you buy the horse.” (1) The desperado cries, “It’s not the bullet that kills you, it’s the hole.” (2) 1984 was a pivotal year in a metamorphosis that took hold of Snyder. Exponents of that change now course through his art like ancestral blood. It was in that year that he accepted a residency at the Ucross Foundation in Ucross, Wyoming –-- a place where reflections of his lineage are mirrored upon the land, and in 1984, Hills met Gordon McConnell. The doorway to Montana was open, waiting in confident expectation for a crossed king, a wandering thief, to come rushing in and preside of the June Rise Ramble. The Rise references not only a point of land that occurs at the confluence of the Tongue and Yellowstone Rivers (where the artist makes his home) but also celebrates an ancient pilgrimage by trappers destined for St. Louis, their treasure-laden barges released on the river when the June waters rise. 1984 also marked the opportunity to participate in Texas On My Mind: Contemporary Visions of The Lone Star State, an exhibition conceived by Becky Duvall Reese (a curator at the Huntington Art Gallery, University of Texas, Austin) and traveled by rail to ten Texas cities. It was here that the tip of the new imagery was revealed. Scattered elements of the epic and contemporary West are now woven throughout Hills’ drawings and constructions. Coupled with an iconography and narrative that synthesize the artist’s wit, poetic metaphor and back beat rhythm/romanticism, these elements beckon from their black obelisk-like facades –-- draw you in by tractor beam --- embrace you --- then spin you upwards toward the western skies. As artist-in-residence at the Custer County Art Center, Hills transfers this mysticism directly to his students --- enhancing thought and perception; charged with a spirituality that blends sorcerer, desperado, Dylanesque philosopher…and June Rise Rambler! 1. D,H. Snyder 2. Laurie Anderson Worlds Within Worlds: The Art of Hills Snyder By Gordon McConnell The Auctioneer of Parting His “Going, going, gone” Shouts even from the Crucifix And brings his Hammer down --- He only sells the Wilderness, The prices of Despair Range from a single human Heart To two --- not any more --- --- Emily Dickinson, c. 1884 STARWHEELS Look up (or out) at the stars some night. You can probably see them better around Miles City than you could in other parts of the world. (Satellites are out tonight) But you’d better stand outside the discount department store, drive-through glare of Main Street for awhile. Turn off the TV. Rub the sleep from your eyes. What is it that you see? Spy satellites the size of eighteen-wheelers catching the sun --- faint, fugitive beacons at 35,000 feet, frail signals, planeloads, tubular projectiles, full of inter-coastal snobs (not even thinking as ther cross “fly over” land where you live --- meteorites, big chunks of cosmic dust struck up like matches against the stratosphere --- planets, stars, above all the stars --- the ancient, generic luminous points --- suns, comets, galaxies, novas. FERTILE CRESCENT Kathy Shiroki (a hyphenated, predecessor, artist-in-the-schools)_ last year gave Hills Snyder a red and yellow plastic powder horn/horn, a child’s toy/instrument --- a pun already taken to several degrees of physical and metaphorical remove from pre-school, unconscious fantasy, injection-molded, propaganda-of-the kid. Look at the toy in its sanguine elevation --- a war bonneted Indian (target) skulks along the arc of the horn. A dual personality, his yellow-profiled persona carries a gun. But if you go around the corner, crouch down and look up through the red profile on the other side, you might see (as Hills Snyder sees) a spike-haired musician duck-0walking to glory with a Fender Stratocaster --- instrument of choice of Jimi Hendrix and subsequent generations of rock fantasists --- an axe, sword and shield or hammer of the gods. (Oh him again…talking backwards like back masked angel/hittin’ chords sittin’ on six strands of wire fence) Heroes yowl through the ages, trumpeting in futile, storied glory --- Christ, Crockett, Kennedy --- the blasphemy is relentlessly projected and received, burned into our willing minds. (You might be the one-eyed jack around here, but I’ve seen the other side of your face.) Intersecting and overlapping arcs guide us to the launch window, the specific point of view where the parts resolve themselves into the whole constellation. We hang --- on the horns of a dilemma --- like druids, waiting for the red moon revelation to burn silhouettes through the stones. DELTA BLUES (AND GREENS AND REDS AND YELLOWS) The vanishing point must be somewhere behind your eyes. Trust the artist to find that point. Stand in the “right” place. The pieces will surely fit. Trust him. His map is a platform, the tower a pulpit. Inside, a fluid vortex leaks out a scrawling misplaced river line (a labyrinth on a napkin) where east and west, “where real and ideal rub up against one another,” This shadow republic --- forty eight states and Baja (its Latin stiletto blade offsetting Florida, announcing, “there’s a lot more to America” Ion the pulpit, a garish recitation of creed: ANGLE / MELODY AMNESIA / ANGEL MEMORY / AMERICA It’s a nocturnal apparition, like Las Vegas, or Spielberg’s Mother Ship animating and illuminating the night over Devil’s Tower. Meanwhile, the archetypal, ubiquitous guitar arches over a patented Snyder cubic planet; and the bigger hero does his balancing act. We learn that the Minotaur is the maze and that “It’s not the bullet that kills you it’s the hole.” There’s a simultaneous unraveling of themes, strands connected, going in different directions, in multiple dimensions. There’s “a character writing all this, his rambling/overstated tone meant to sound like someone who’s backing you into a corner…an unhinged character.” There are words to be looked at and letters to be felt, objects to be read, visions to be seen. Look up, and out, and in. June Rise Ramble Vigil/Vanishing Point/Meanwhile, 1986 51 X 135 X 29 inches mixed media on paper and wood, miniatures, brick, string, bullet hole Hero As Scene Through Scream, 1986 32 X 24 inches pencil on paper All Alone In Romance, 1986 32 X 24 inches pencil on paper Y Stone Panorama, 1986 20 X 26 pencil on paper Canoe Exits Minotaur, 1986 23 X 12 X 7 pencil, metal leaf and epoxy on paper, wood Trojan Horse of Love, 1987 58 X 18 X 31 wood, mixed media Hangin’ On The Horns of A Bad Moon, 1987 43 X 22 X 24 painted wood, wire, plastic powder horn Achilles’ Next Request, 1987 48 X 14 X 18 wood, mixed media The Friction Line, 1987 65 X 74 X 50 travelogue photo, mixed media on wood, paper, and clay Thief With Fence, 1987 15 X 12 X 5 wood, mixed media with Max Snyder: Siegecraft Advance, 1987 49 X 16 X 12 arrows, droid, wagon, mask, mixed media on wood and clay |