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Wayne Smith

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The most memorable experience of Wayne Smith's exhibition is that he is so good. Such technical skill is rarely, if ever, found, and it delights. His superb execution of a range of styles affords the viewer immense aesthetic pleasure. His surfaces, his mastery of form, are almost sufficient unto themselves. 

But Smith is far more interesting than that, and I think it important to look at this present exhibi­tion as part of his continuing development. To do that I need to take issue with the basic premise of George Petelin's review of Wayne's 1987 exhibition Function, Desire (eyeline, August, 1987). The hidden agenda in Petelin's review would seem to be suggesting that Wayne's role should be to recoup the humanist/modernist project of making meaning rather than to reflect the disintegration of mean­ing, but this is never made explicit. Doing that could throw George's own critical position into question. 

Wayne, Petelin says, "projects ideas into things that, of themselves, lack adequate cues for recognition because they have lost their mean­ing through the distortions and dislocations of reproduction." That seems to define the work of art in the age of media explosion pretty well. George continues that Wayne "still wants them [ideas] to be recognized for their lost meaning, yet leaves out definite signifiers that an audience can connect to their own store of sig­nifieds." But it might be argued that, in the postmodern condition, we are always strug­gling to recognize lost ideas, and with ever decreasing ability. 

In this present exhibition, in most of the works at least, I was able to find sufficient cues to read quite a bit about the construction and deconstruction of contemporary culture. If

Wayne Smith, Untitled, 1988.