Michael Ferris, Jr.
Education:1996 MFA, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana Major: Painting1991 BFA, Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas City, Missouri Major: Painting1990 Exchange Student, Brighton Polytechnic, Brighton, England Major: Painting GRANTS I SCHOLARSHIPS I HONORS1999 Illinois Arts Council Fellowship Finalist1997 Project Grant, Community Arts Assistant Program, Chicago, Illinois1994 Drawing Instructor Assistantship, Tuition Waver, Stipend, Indiana Umversity1991 Peter T. Bowen Drawing Competition Award, KCAI1988 Liquitex Product Scholarship Award1987 Kansas City Art Institute Full Tuition ScholarshipACADEMIC APOINTMENTSAug 2000 May 2001 Instructional Assistant Professor of Art; Illinois State University, Normal, Illinois Teaching Drawing and Paintingsource: Roswell Museum and Art Center - Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program http://www.rair.org/MarshellGallery-Ferris.htmMichael Ferris, Jr.: Sculptor and Painter At the historical center of the Chicago tradition in art lie the essential themes of fantastic personal narrative, the eccentric human figure, and expressive emotion. Michael Ferris, Jr. reflects the continuation of that tradition at its core through the two the different worlds he "narrates" in separate bodies of artwork. On the one hand his sculptures of large primal humanoid figures, some with fantastic features like multiple hands, ears, and box-like appendages, are strange totems that reflect the artist's inward gaze: visitors from another realm. On the other hand the artist's paintings outline a tale of personal pathos and risk, depicting the artist as his alter ego, a self-consumed, lonely, and regretful old man surrounded by his unvalued and dismembered sculptural figures as his only companions. The old man as artist has invested everything in the artistic labor of his creations, and yet remains tragically cut off from recognition and engagement in the world and life. There is also a shade of a tongue-in-cheek quality about this scenario that Ferris depicts, a dark self humor about the kind of cliché which the artist portrays himself becoming. Resonating between the world of his sculptures and the world he portrays in his paintings is a particular story with a message, the dilemma that though we seek connection to reality and life, the impossibility of trying to fit our selves into its framework can make reality, and artistic intention seem absurd. Ferris relates his sculptures to "the idea of the 'immortal' from Chinese lore", beings who can pass from the real world to another place. Ferris explains, "they don't care if they don't fit into this society anymore because their thoughts are on this other realm." They are the foils to the real world, emotional harbingers and calcified edifices of a deeper expressive realm, sometimes revealing melancholic inwardness, sometimes leering outward with a peculiar sardonic grin. The sculptures are deeply influenced by the art of non-Western cultures, particularly African and Middle Eastern art. Their surfaces are created using a special wood inlay technique called intarsia that generates geometric patterns with a kind of primal jazz rhythm spread over the brooding heft and bulk of his figures. Ferris' particular self-invented approach to intarsia using found pieces of hardwood was influenced by his memory of an elaborate wood inlay Syrian gaming table that had been part of his household environment growing up. This also reflects Ferris' interest in outsider art with its sense of funky invention and obsessive technique creating art out of found objects.The artist's paintings stand in a kind of apposition to his sculpture world, in the same way that the tradition of representational Western painting stand in apposition to the non-Western intuitive and primal realm of his sculpture. In visual works Ferris depicts himself as an old man still making his sculptures and who, though lonely and alienated, is still conversant with his work. These images also stand as a critical allegory about a common artist cliché. They comment on the self-centered hermeticism and alienation that the artist can become entrapped in. The images are filled with vibrations of the fantastic in the ordinary, through the strange scatter of humanoid parts, the crowding of space with heavy baroque decorative details, and the occasional blank television set screens that seem to be portals to another world. The historically important Chicago artists Seymour Rosofsky and Ivan Albright were decisive influences to Ferris's personal vision, and helped to lay the path upon which the artist continues to explore his own particular artistic course. Like Rosofsky, Ferris sees the world with irony and otherness; a vision of the fantastic in the pedestrian, ordinary suburban world. He is influenced by Rosofsky's sardonic humor and wit through his ability to mock his idea of being an artist while also creating a mocking vision of an absurd world to have to live in. Like Albright, Ferris is intrigued by the pathos of mortal limitations with a brooding consciousness about timely existence. On Albright's darkly obsessive pictures, Ferris remarks they are images which have "beautiful detail and are yet repulsive, and trigger that inner psychological world of humanity ... they are hard to look at, but they are true." Coupled with Rosofsky and Albright, the artist's painting technique reflects an interest in late Gothic Flemish art like the work of Van der Goes with its crisp detail and moody spirituality. Like his Chicago art predecessors Michael Ferris, Jr. creates a story that, even in its dark humor, has a deep psychological purpose with an existential humanism at its core. Remembering his father who was an inspired and prolific artist like himself, Michael recalls him saying, " 'Even though it is weird or doesn't fit, believe in it because it comes from you'... I picked that up from him, what it is to be an artist and to be devoted to the human nature of art." Diane Thodos is an artist and art critic who lives in Evanston, IL