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The paintings in Shannon Canningss show Trigger Happy pay homage to a forbidden fruit of her youth: toy guns. The artist says her parents wouldnt allow anything resembling the weapon into the house, and this, you could say, triggered some rebelliousness in her adulthood. On a recent hunt for subject matter in the toy aisle (Cannings tends to paint relics of childhood), she was drawn to a pack of squirt guns in rainbow colors. They just looked like a pack of giant Jolly Ranchers, she says. I was just thrilled with them.
Cannings makes realistic paintings of the toy guns using a mix of glaze and oil to render the toys shiny and translucent qualities. Trigger Happy features Canningss tiara-crowned, cherub-faced daughter Madeline aiming a plastic pistol at the viewer, and in Friendly Fire, two squirt guns are aimed at each other.
The names of the pieces are things that I think about being a happy veneer for something that carries a great consequence, she says. Like Friendly Fire, that sounds like a game you play with a hose in your backyard; it doesnt sound as horrible as it really is. It seems Canningss upbringing had lasting effects. I didnt tell my mother that I bought those plastic guns for a long time Im an adult, you know, Im allowed to own plastic guns! she says and laughs.
She wont let her kids play with the toy weapons either. She says she felt uneasy about letting Madeline hold the squirt gun even for arts sake because shes worried about sending mixed messages. Before this, I worked a lot with some candy as well, and at one point she picked up a lollipop and said, Is this food or art? 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays. Through August 9. Anya Tish Gallery, 4411 Montrose. For information, call 713-524-2299 or visit www.anyatishgallery.com. Free.
Tuesdays-Saturdays. Starts: July 12. Continues through Aug. 9, 2008