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MICHAEL KUCH
Drawing from his
imagination, Michael Kuch potrays a world both fantastic and
familiar. Whimsical juxtapositions of human figure and natural
form fuse into personal metaphor. A head sprouts flowers,
evocative of inner growth; another face hides under s sea shell hat,
seeking protection. A distinctive, patient tenderness suffuses his
imagery. Anthropomorphic frogs, wearing no more than frowns,
satire our naked, vulneralble condition. Unceremonious portraits
of biblical and mythological characters comment gently on iconoclastic
times. A Sisyphus, toiling behind a giant snail, does not strain
his muscles; his sad, soft posture conveys a mental rather than physical
burden. Kuch's art does not focus on verisimilitude, nor does it
dwell in aesthetic interpretation; rather these qualities attend human
experience as revealed from the inside: a world of psychological
reflection.
Complete collections of Michael
Kuch’s Double Elephant Press are housed in the rare-book libraries of
many notable institutions, including the Library of Congress, Yale
University, The University of Delaware, and Smith College. Kuch
studied with Leonard Baskin at Hampshire College and printed etchings for
Baskin’s Gehenna Press for over ten years. Working in a variety of
media, including painting and sculpture, Michael divides his time between
Northampton and New York City.
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