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Excerpt:
Alexander Bogardy’s Catholic religion was a dominant
theme of his life. He attended Mass every day and often
did simple jobs around the parish house after services.
Many of the paintings he completed in the 1960s and
1970s are painstaking, naive renderings of the decorative
elements of church interiors with which he was familiar,
and frequently combine worldly and sacred motifs in
ways that evoke an ancient tradition in religious representation:
the secular adornment of holy figures. Bogardy’s interpretations
of simple Bible stories and his iconographic renderings
of Christ, the Virgin Mary, saints and angels are marked
by their intense colour, form and ornamentation – and
often, too, by a fetching fondness for bouffant hair,
pancake make-up and black eyeliner.
A Hungarian immigrant, Bogardy lived in Washington,
DC. After retiring early on a government disability
pension in the 1950s he learned to paint in oil by enrolling
in extension art classes. He also studied cosmetology
at various beauty schools in the early 1950s. Although
it is not clear to what extent he actually practised
for money in a bona fide beauty salon, he regularly
cut and coloured the hair of several friends and acquaintances.
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His painting The Clinic shows a young cosmetology instructor
(perhaps Bogardy himself) leading a class in the comb-out
technique. The domed Romanesque construction, a framing
device which is also found in many of his Catholic paintings,
often includes flanking columns reminiscent of the smaller
side chapels of the Basilica of the National Shrine
of the Immaculate Conception in Washington.
Bogardy painted until the mid-1970s, filling his small
apartment from floor to ceiling with his work. Many
of his religious paintings were created for private
devotion or possibly for atonement for past transgressions.
Breaking with representational traditions of the past,
few of Bogardy’s angels and Virgins look chaste. In
fact, most have brightly coloured nails and toes and
their coiffed hair frames dazzling, obviously made-up
faces. In one oil painting from the early 1960s, Give
Us This Day Our Daily Bread, now in the collection of
the Smithsonian American Art Museum, disembodied heads
with unique hair colourings float around the firmament.
Clearly, they are fanciful clones of the Clairol hair
colour charts once found in every beauty shop in America.
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