This Chicago Artist Looks to History—And His Own Mind—To Create
For Matt Bodett, the brain is a powerful muse. A visual and performance artist, poet, and professor with a downtown studio, he was diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder as an undergraduate. But Bodett, who went on to earn his master’s in painting and printmaking from Boise State University, prefers the more archaic, somewhat romantic expression of “madness,” with its connotations of creativity and heightened access to emotional expression.
“In our contemporary discourse, disabilities can be too tied to ‘How do we fix this?’ rather than ‘How can we channel this experience into something meaningful?’ ” says Bodett, who works as a disability advocate. “For me, the most powerful way to manage my symptoms is to embrace the madness and create artwork around it.”
With painting being a major focus of his practice, Bodett often embarks on oil works using an image culled from reference photos of the Western canon—Napoleon, Hercules, St. Francis or Jesus, for example—by such painters as Rubens, Caravaggio, Gérard and Michelangelo. “As a culture, we share a rich visual vocabulary of the ‘masterworks,’ ” the artist notes. “But when we look beyond the traditional narrative—in history, religion, mythology—well, often that person seems crazy!” Among Bodett’s female subjects are Eve, a passel of saints and Botticelli’s Three Graces. “Throughout history, women have been viewed as either subservient ciphers or magical creatures. If they dared to take on a more assertive role, they were deemed ‘hysterics’—think Joan of Arc,” he adds.
After capturing the essence of a person or scene on canvas, Bodett switches gears. Working intuitively, “in that mad place where language and the physical experience of the world is slippery,” Bodett describes, the artist disrupts his compositions with scribbles, scraps of poetry, over-washing and spots of color. His goal, after all, is not to replicate old masters but to illuminate the processes of a mentally disordered mind and engage the viewer on a visceral level. “The experience isn’t about the preciousness of the art commodity but rather about sparking a response in the moment,” he explains.
Bodett, whose works will be exhibited at Artruss this fall, is like a visual DJ—sampling images and layering elements to create works that thrum with emotional resonance. His paintings defy easy interpretation while daring you to look away.