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Pow! It's a brush with Batman

Or is it Batman with a brush? No matter -- art by Adam West and fans is on display.

GALLERY

July 13, 2006|Barbara E. Hernandez, Special to The Times

ADAM WEST said he made a decision 20 years ago to make peace with his signature role as Batman.

"There was a time when I had to deal with a terrible stigma because nobody could imagine the actor who created Batman could do anything else," West said. "In the last 20 or so years I've made a beneficial agreement with the role of Batman, and that is to enjoy it and the response it gets."


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So when this year marked the 40th anniversary of the 1966-68 TV series, West decided to exhibit drawings and paintings he created as an impression of that time. The show is called "Beyond Batman," at the M Modern Gallery in Palm Springs, and it is accompanied by a tribute exhibit, "Gotham," that includes more than 40 contemporary artists presenting their interpretation of "Batman." Both are showing through July 23.

West's show features 52 sketches and paintings depicting characters such as the Joker, played by Cesar Romero, and Catwoman, played by Julie Newmar.

"I had been working on a series of pictures to kind of give my expression to the anniversary," West said from his home in Ketchum, Idaho. (He also lives part-time in Palm Springs.)

The actor added that his artwork is either loved or hated by audiences. "I don't paint butter dishes, doilies or hummingbirds in my garden. It's more raw, I suppose. But it always creates a reaction," West said.

Jay Nailor, owner of M Modern Gallery, curated the exhibitions.

Nailor's gallery specializes in an emerging genre known as lowbrow art, or pop surrealism. Lowbrow is a form of artwork inspired by Los Angeles pop culture and is becoming a beloved staple of Generation X members who enjoy its nostalgia and kitschy cool. Artists such as Camille Rose Garcia, Mark Ryden and Shag dominate the genre with religious, cartoon, surf and tiki influences.

"We knew the tribute show would be a good way for animators and illustrators to take part," Nailor said. "I'm also a big fan of the 1960s 'Batman' series."

Nailor's artists in "Gotham" proved to be fans of the series too. Amanda Visell, a 28-year-old artist and freelance illustrator in South Pasadena, said she wanted to be part of the exhibition immediately.

"I used to collect 1960s Batman comic books when I was little," she said. "And I knew I really wanted to play with the suits."

Her painting "Double Identity" features a smiling Bruce Wayne, Batman's alter ego, sipping a cup of tea and being attended to by his manservant, Alfred, while the other half of his image is a frowning Batman with Robin hanging by nearly a thread to his Batapult.

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