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Aaron Noble

February 12 - July 14, 2002

close Aaron Morse
Seed
2002

Acrylic on wall.

Inspired by comic book imagery, Aaron Noble's paintings incorporate superhero body parts morphed, stretched, and free floating in a 'negative space' landscape. He is known in San Francisco for his earlier WPA-styled outdoor murals depicting the city's labor history. Now his interests involve contemporary popular street culture, Western comic art, Japanese anime and manga, video games, and technology. Noble created a series of large-scale paintings for the Museum's lobby walls.

 

Hammer Projects are curated by James Elaine.

About the Exhibition

By Scott MacLeod

 

The superheroic exaggerates the normal proportions of humanity [and] is the expression of both the fears and unfulfilled aspirations of the adolescent. . . . The superhero-like the adolescent-is one apart, someone from somewhere else, someone who does not quite belong-but someone nonetheless needed by society when monsters and demons stir. (1)

 

In his 1989 performance Confession, Aaron Noble crawled laboriously atop a table, abjectly confessing his own weakness and perfidy. Wiry, naked muscles stretched taut by the huge guitar amp roped onto his back, face distended by the microphone jammed into his mouth, he called himself an emotional villain, but his body's visible suffering more directly conveyed a mitigating humanity and, ironically, courage.

 

Villains have always intrigued because of their emotional complexities; in the 1960s Marvel Comics revolutionized its genre by presenting equally alienated, angst-ridden heroes and heroines struggling against limits of human endurance and faith to gain conditional victories over internal and external demons. More

Notes
1. Christopher Hart, How to Draw Comic Book Heroes and Villains (New York: Watson-Guptill Publications, 1995).
2. Aaron Noble, conversation with the author, December 2001.
3. DROOM is the name of a forgotten character who is technically the first modern Marvel superhero, premiering in Amazing Adventures 1 (June 1961).
4. Noble, conversation with the author.

Scott MacLeod is an artist.

 

Hammer Projects are made possible, in part, with support from The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, and the Los Angeles County Arts Commission.