
For it's a similar set in which Ann's family and friends now
find themselves. Look at the hip, minimalist environment where
Fred Flintstone's pet dinosaur,
Dino, sprints (to a bongo riff) across a Mies van der Rohe living room
apparently as long as a football field. Very much like it is the place
where now stand (or sit) Grandma Zula, Uncle Weldon
and her mom's best friend, Emma Jane (above).
But the late 60's zeitgeist is evoked by more than just a rendering
style after "The Jetsons." Ann's subjects are perfectly cast.
Like alien abductions, she has lifted her specimens directly out
of their family photos because
they so look like 1967. In hair, dress or facial expression, they're
archetypes. And I don't know about you, but I know the type. They're
regular folk: kind, unassuming, and for the most part, comfortable
in the skinny ties,
sweater dresses and big hair then in style (or perhaps a little out
of it). Boy are they in for a shock.
Because, unbeknownst to them, in the
next moment tectonic plates will slip and cultural seismographs will
register big changes. I don't remember 1967 so much for what happened
as much as for what happened next. Martin Luther King and Bobby Kennedy
both died
at the hands of assassins, King on my birthday and Kennedy two months
later on my sister's. My blue-collar cousins in Cleveland started
getting drafted and shipped off to Vietnam, and an hour north of
my hometown
of East Liverpool
there would soon be four dead in O-hio.

After all that, it would
get much harder for bubbly optimists (Pamela
1967)
to keep up a front, and I can imagine even Ann's cool, collected
sister (Jane
— the Recital, above)
dropping her little white sweater and raising one clenched fist in
protest.
Meanwhile,
back at the ranch, Ann's acrylic portraits of Texans we've all met,
married, descend from or are otherwise related to are so dead-on
because her subjects
are vulnerable and somewhat at ease, apparently photographed by a
friend or family member.