The Profound Mundanity of Richard McGuire’s “My Things” |

The Profound Mundanity of Richard McGuire’s “My Things” |

The Profound Mundanity of Richard McGuire’s “My Things” |

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Richard McGuire is an American artist whose work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art and at the Morgan Library & Museum. He’s also an illustrator, children’s-book author, toy designer, and founding member of the post-punk band Liquid Liquid, for which he plays bass. It would be fair to call his work multidisciplinary.

But McGuire’s most recent project, “My Things,” a depiction of the innumerable small objects he interacts with in a single day, still feels like a departure. “Here,” his award-winning graphic novel from 2014, was awash in color, and its images evinced a deft, relaxed sense of space. “My Things,” meanwhile, employs a tight grid of black-and-white panels. What remains consistent are McGuire’s powers of attention: in the ten pages of “My Thing,” above, McGuire studies the minutiae of touch, gesture, and interaction, his eye keenly attuned to the way objects shape and scaffold our lives. That theme is of a piece with McGuire’s “The Way There and Back,” an installation on view, this month, at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum; the exhibit will feature more than a hundred objects, each an “abstracted sculptural evocation of a shoe.”

Richard McGuire, “My Things,” © 2018. Commissioned by the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum on the occasion of “The Domestic Plane: New Perspectives on Tabletop Art Objects.”

Sourse: newyorker.com

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