BELLEVUE, WA.- Robert Williams: The Father of Exponential Imagination, which is on view at
Bellevue Arts Museum, presents recent works from Los Angeles-based artist Robert Williams. Williams is a unique and contradictory figure in contemporary American art, best known for painting exquisitely detailed allegories and epic history paintings.
The Father of Exponential Imagination features over forty recent oil paintings alongside two of Williamss major sculptures, The Rapacious Wheel and Errant Levity. The exhibition coincides with the publication of a major new monograph on Williamss work by Seattle-based publisher Fantagraphics Books, due November 2019.
Williams began his career as a key figure on the 1960s hot rod scene, creating advertisements for Ed Big Daddy Roth, and gained a further following through his involvement in the underground art scene. He was a founding contributor of ZAP Comix, one of the most profane counter-culture comic books ever published and his 1981 book, The Lowbrow Art of Robt. Williams, gave name to what would later be considered an art movement.
Williamss subject matter and commitment to craftsmanship in painting came at a time when conceptual and abstract art were ubiquitous in America, casting him as an outlaw figure in the art world. With their intricate details and emphasis on imagination and human emotion, Williamss paintings present a case for the return of craft, observation, draftsmanship, and technical skill in painting, and for the consideration of the cartoon and graphic arts as on a par with fine art.
Says Williams, many people, and our society in general, have a cautionary resentment regarding overt and gratuitous imagination. This admonition stems from concerns that the violations with respect to conformity engenders dangerous anomalies, character flaws, and worst, perversion. Possibly so, but more importantly it breeds new playing fields of ideasand ideas, as they sometimes do, grow exponentially
The BAM exhibition pays homage to hot rod culture with the installation of a 1947 Chevy Woody in the Museum Forum. The car is on view throughout the run of the exhibition, offering visitors a glimpse into the excitement of Southern Californias Kustom Kulture and the cultural moment in which Williams began his career.
Robert Williams (b. 1943) grew up immersed in Southern Californias Kustom Kulture, Rock n Roll, and EC Comics. He became the studio art director to hot rod innovator Ed Big Daddy Roth in 1965, and was a founding contributor to the underground ZAP Comix in the late 60s while also working as a commercial illustrator. Frustrated with the venal contemporary art scene of the 1980s, in 1994 he founded Juxtapoz Art & Culture Magazine, a publication dedicated to the underground, which has become the top-selling art magazine worldwide. He lives and works in Los Angeles, CA.