For the
last eleven years, D. Dominick Lombardi has been working obsessively
on the series “Post
Apocalyptic Tattoos.” It began in 1998 as many artists’
projects do--with doodles in a sketchbook.
Quickly,
those doodles came to resemble characters-- and as Dominick fleshed
them out, they soon demanded their own world. Over the next ten years,
his project mushroomed to encompass drawings in charcoal and
India ink; reverse Plexiglas paintings; silkscreen and
woodcut prints; and sculptures and bas reliefs
assembled from pigment and papier-mache applied over
junkyard detritus. He has also generated countless
working drawings made with ballpoint and felt-tip pen
on scraps of paper, or graphite on newsprint. Lately,
Dominick has been focusing more intensively on the
creatures’ environment, exploring it in the
series-within-a-series he calls Graffoos--graffitti
paintings made on new and old canvases.
Creatively, the project was born one night as Dominick
was worrying about the fate of the universe. Its mutant
creatures embody his fears and hopes for a future
world, distorted by pollution, transgenic mutation, and
apocalyptic events. These new people include Blue Boy,
whose innards spill down his legs; his sweetheart, the
rubbery-boned, turquoise-lipped Twister; Big Foot, who
perambulates on a single massive foot; and Clown, who
dies early on in the story from an enlarged hair
follicle on his tongue. Central to the tale is the
unseen Tattoo Artist, a character who chronicles his
world by producing all these drawings, paintings, and
sculptures.
“Are you the Tattoo Artist?” I asked Dominick once.
“No,” he said. “I’m the vehicle for the Tattoo Artist
who’s sending these images to me.”
Yet despite
all this impending gloom and doom, Dominick’s characters pursue
their distorted lives with so much spirit and joie de vivre that
their universe never seems bleak. And Dominick himself has pursued
the project with a zeal, intensity, and joy in
craftsmanship that suggests life is truly worth living.
- Carol Kino