"We are that strange species that constructs artifacts
intended to counter the natural flow of forgetting."
William Gibson
J. Todd
Greene isn’t going anywhere. This can be a frustrating realization for those of
us who occasionally catch ourselves grieving his relative unfamousness as if he’s missed
some boat, as if he should’ve devoted more time over the last twenty-plus years
chasing opportunities and generating interest. But it seems to me there’s no
shoulding on Todd (and let’s all stop shoulding on ourselves). What there is is
the gathering of intelligence, the sharing of what we’re seeing, the
documenting of our own insights, what we
believe we’re being shown. This is what I take to be the good work we’re all
called to, and Todd’s dedication in this direction, all day long and into the
night, has been a constant inspiration to me. More often than not, some line or
image he’s crafted is glowing at the edge of my thinking, taking me somewhere
new and strange. There’s the twenty-three or so Bulb albums he shares with
anyone who asks. And there’s the painting. Oh the painting.
I’m so
dependent on my conversations with Todd that I forget that what he’s been up to
might be news to others. One entry point is the PawPaw sermons. The short
version: His great-grandfather was a southern minister and colleague of the
similarly comported and way famouser folk artist, Howard Finster. Whereas
Finster abandoned the pulpit to paint Coke bottles and plywood displayed outside
his bicycle repair shop, eventually landing in exhibits around the world and on REM
and Talking Heads album covers, Todd’s great-grandfather kept at it in spite of
the fact that he never learned to read properly. In his sermon preparation, he
pencilled images on cards as his wife read biblical passages aloud. Standing in
front of his congregation, he’d consult the cards within an open Bible as he
brought the good words to the gathered. In the late nineties, Todd’s mother
presented him with a shoebox full of the cards.
What Todd did and does with his grandfather’s images (Todd knew him as Paw Paw) is one of the most inspiring things I’ve had the privilege of being near. Adding color, dimension, and intensity of expression to his inheritance, it has to be seen live to be properly experienced, and alongside so much else, it will be beginning this Friday evening March 7th at O'More College of Art and Design in Franklin. Remarkably, this marks Todd's first exhibit outside of Davidson County. He'll be there responding to questions and being awesome all evening. Come. On. Out.
What Todd did and does with his grandfather’s images (Todd knew him as Paw Paw) is one of the most inspiring things I’ve had the privilege of being near. Adding color, dimension, and intensity of expression to his inheritance, it has to be seen live to be properly experienced, and alongside so much else, it will be beginning this Friday evening March 7th at O'More College of Art and Design in Franklin. Remarkably, this marks Todd's first exhibit outside of Davidson County. He'll be there responding to questions and being awesome all evening. Come. On. Out.
2 comments:
we've had 2 todd greene works in our house the past 15 years. One is a paw paw that i still meditate on by times - a couple kneeling before a mirror with a snake. Thanks for sharing this.
Todd is my favorite artist of all time. And not just because he is my friend. I wish I could see this show.
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