Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

TOLERANCE

Rate this book

Chris Mars' painting style, examples of which graced all of his album covers, is marked by nightmarish landscapes and grotesque, distorted figures. He draws inspiration from his older brother's struggle with schizophrenia. "...From my hands, my mission: To free the oppressed; to champion the persecuted, and the submissive; to liberate through revelation the actualized Self in those proposed by some to have no self at all. It's in every single one of us, somewhere underneath that word on our chest. In my hands, my version: All art is political in some sense, be it through conformity, reflection, propaganda or rebellion. My paintings are rallies and trials, photographs of a moment when Truth was made public, and Mercy known. Question why a villain is villainized, a victim martyred. Ask why a group is demonized, and the motives for control. See for yourself what the truth looks like in your hands. Dig it up and hold it for a while. This work you see, it's my Truth. But please don't take my word for it."

"Minneapolis artist Chris Mars is living proof that F. Scott Fitzgerald was dead wrong when he said there are no second acts in American lives. Though famous in the 1980s as the drummer for alt-rock heroes The Replacements, Mars eventually left the music world behind entirely to focus on the visual arts, now specializing in stunningly evocative, macabre portraits."

-The Onion A.V. Club.

100 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2008

19 people want to read

About the author

Chris Mars

11 books2 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
19 (57%)
4 stars
7 (21%)
3 stars
5 (15%)
2 stars
2 (6%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Horror DNA.
1,274 reviews119 followers
October 11, 2019
Genius usually stems from a combination of madness, intelligence and incredible talent. In the case of painter Chris Mars, the talent is undeniable and his personal experience dealing with the mental illness of his brother does the rest. A self-taught artist, Mars creates by pulling demons from the dark depths of the cruel, incomprehensive world his sibling had to endure as a schizophrenic in the 1960s. As for intelligence, that important and elusive element, the artist dissects modern society in order to construct a critical visual discourse that rival that of any cultural critic. In Tolerance, a veritable tour de force, horror, sadness and darkness meet in truly brilliant ways.

You can read Gabino's full review at Horror DNA by clicking here.
Profile Image for Mark Desrosiers.
601 reviews157 followers
March 8, 2009
Like his most obvious predecessor, H.R. Giger, this former Replacements drummer and current creep-master really seems to enjoy living inside that "dark intestine" (Ted Hughes quote). But rather than giving us monstrous futuristic biomechanics, Mars focuses on an almost medieval sense of bodily decay: limbs falling off, red-rimmed eyeballs not quite in their sockets, flesh that looks like that trophy nose in Ghirlandao's Portrait of an Old Man with a Young Boy. Sometimes his composition are Bosch or Brueghel style agglomerations of various Hades-walkers taking up the entire canvas, others are more conventional "portraits" dominated by a detailed, hideous grey-pallor face, often quite recognizable behind the skull tectonics and misapplied cosmetics. (If anyone should be commissioned to paint an Official Portrait of Mark E. Smith, Chris Mars is the guy.)

Much of this is motivated by a lefty political anger that I can totally get with. My only problem in this collection is that Mars is allowed too much room to explain his paintings with words, e.g. "'Puppeteer' pictures a man who has created a duality of self in order to be accepted [rakka rakka rakka:]." This is especially irritating in the works devoted to "mental illness" -- Mars's annotation can make his oeuvre look more like art therapy than Art. So I reluctantly took a star away for that. Otherwise, a beautiful, hideous book.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.