The Little Lost Operas / by Sandra Meigs

The Little Lost Operas 

March 12 to 18 April 18, 2020 
Susan Hobbs, 137 Tecumseth Street, Toronto M6J 2H2
Opening Thursday, March 12, from 6 – 8 pm

Her Deathbed

Her Deathbed

The Little Lost Operas explore how sentiment can implode through emotional pathways, into the subconscious mind. In the vein of Meigs’ earlier explorations on the theme of the Tragicomedy (Scenes for My AffectionScenes on a Sea of Joy and SorrowJOYJOYSORROW) the works portray invented operatic scenes each with a puppet in the midst of their Aria, and paper dolls as the supporting actors.  Activated by detailed handiwork, fabric frames that move with air circulation, roughly recognizable stage settings, theatrical and musical references, the viewer is drawn in through intimate visual engagement. Each puppet is hand made by whittling, sewing, or clay sculpting. The use of dramatic gestural devices brings a sudden recognition that something palpable is happening within the painting; perhaps it is love, despair, arousal, or impending death.
 
Each is silent yet vocal and orchestrated, plotted yet absurd, rich in detail yet lacking all the information.

Written texts accompanying each painting contain excerpts from Playbill notes, opera synopses and music album reviews clumped together in Meigs’ enigmatic style.

Danlie Acebuque, Baritone, will perform Mein Sehnen, Mein Wähnen from Die Tote Stadt by Korngold and Largo al factotum from Barber of Seville by Rossini during the opening.

For more information please contact the gallery or visit our website. www.susanhobbs.com