Zágorec-Csuka Judit: Gábor Zoltán festőművész portréja (Lendva, 2002)

Részletek Gábor Zoltán prózai műveiből

the fundamental message in his creativity, and he repines over not belonging in a world like this; he feels isolated and forgotten. For those reasons, he can relate to the mysticism of De Chirico, moved by empty, abandoned spaces shining in some imaginary moon­light, dazzling, sparse light. He finds the mel­ancholy in these paintings beautiful and esthetically profound. Gabor's painting are filled with motifs and objective forms; he doesn't accept ab­stract painting, asserting that it is difficult to determine the degree of its quality and "artistry". Writing on that subject in "Hom­ing Pigeon," he says: "I am of the opinion that in abstract forms it is easier to hid ig­norance and lack of dexterity than when rep­resenting visual, objective reality. The absolute dictatorship of abstract 'art' ap­pears to me inappropriate to ourtimes. Also, so-called naive 'artists' do not merely show the awkwardness of absent skills and dilet­tantism; most likely they don't even under­stand the negativity that accompanies it. Its advocates emphasize the significance of 'preserving tradition.' It would be wiser to let that subject flow onto paper with the writ­ten word and not conserve it with such osten­tatious paintings. In an esthetically cultured person those paintings induce antipathy." Gabor's own formal expression lies some­where between cubism and constructivism, or a mixture of both. Everything he wants to tell in his paintings he constructs in geomet­ric planes. "That kind of painting does not lie; with its two-dimensionality it does not awaken false feelings of depth or three di­mensions." His frescoes are particularly in­dicative of that formal expression, whereas, in his smaller oil paintings, there always exists the so-called "unreal" suggestion of perspective, the result of his academic in­heritance and adaptation to the wishes of a broader public. We often come across an inhuman world in his pictures, representing mankind's ethical and spiritual collapse, his deval­uation, upon which Gábor comments as fol­lows: "I do not merely argue man's gradual moral and spiritual collapse, for man is completely degraded, and that is a fact. I could say, ironically, that I have removed man from my paintings because I am not an animalistic painter. The pictures, „Portrait of a Psychopath" and „Hypocrites," most clearly express my opinion and view of life, and many years of having worked in the psy­chiatric clinic in Vrapče has only confirmed them." The double-dealing man, greedy and selfish, are characteristics that Gábor hates ("Trophy"). His works are filled with many-layered symbolism. "Riders of the Apocalypse" is a metaphor of devastating horrors that occur throughout the world, not just in the Balkans. Among the artist's favorite themes is the still life, for he is not imbued with any kind of concept or ideal, and therefore radiates the pure visual beauty of an object. "Sometimes I would so much like to repose in some sort of still life." Gábor is drawn to places, nationalities, people, but, at the same time, he scorns them all when they revert to extremes — nationalism, self-interest, duplicity, vehe­mence, presumption, arrogance, greed, ly­ing, superiority toward others... His philo­sophy is: "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, do not lie, and do not offend others. Those are conditions for 161

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