Mark Mothersbaugh is doodling. He is always doodling.
It's why he has put me on speakerphone: to keep his hands free for the perseverative sketching that has kept his fingers itching for the past six decades, something he calls a "discipline and an obsession and a compulsion." He draws every day, no matter what. And if he doesn't, he says, he feels "cold and clammy and nervous about it." He sometimes awakes in the middle of the night fiending for a sketchpad.
You know Mothersbaugh. He's the guy from Devo, beloved New Wave band, best remembered for stackable red hats, campy dystopia and rousing admonitions to "whip it." Since then, Mothersbaugh has surfed a comfortable career as a Hollywood composer, writing music for TV and film — credits include "Rugrats" and "Beekman's World," as well as the scores for half of director Wes Anderson's films. And now at 65, he finds himself branching into a new realm: the fine art world.
This weekend "Mark Mothersbaugh: Myopia," organized this year by the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, travels to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts. Billed as a retrospective, the exhibition is the first comprehensive presentation of Mothersbaugh's visual output — which precedes, overwhelms and informs all things Devo. It is a petri dish of oddball arcana, sprouting all kinds of exotic flora. Fuzzy, illustrated rugs hang alongside manipulated photography. Fantastical musical instruments made of birdcalls share billing with a giant ruby carved into a custard cone.
And then, of course, there are those daily drawings. The show contains more than 30,000 of them, each postcard-sized and searingly colored.
Mothersbaugh, calling from his L.A. recording studio (a former surgical theater in a plastic surgeon's office), tells how it all started.
As a kid in Akron, Ohio, he was legally blind. He spent years stumbling through a world of amorphous, colored fog — and failing, humiliatingly, his way through first grade.
"I spent every day being spanked, sent to the office and standing in a corner," he said.