|
Between Interconnectedness
Artists Ian Burns, Angie Drakopoulos, Eva Lee, Marci MacGuffie, Sam
Martineau, Caitlin
Masley, David McQueen
Curated by Suzanne Kim
December 4th – January 16th, 2005
By abstracting truths from various disciplines of research such as engineering,
quantum mechanics, architecture, and metaphysics these seven artists demonstrate
the diverse ways a work of art can illuminate the dynamics of life. Synthesizing
numerous materials and mediums to bring their ideas to fruition, they embody
the modern arrangements of nature and technology. Their personal vocabularies
are brought into a larger scope as they create visual bridges for the interstices
of the material and immaterial world. As this exhibition focuses on work that
presents a deeper grasp of the workings of the world around us, a new sense of
maximalism
is encountered.
Eva Lee explores the linear progression of Darwinian evolution
through a series of digitally generated animations. Simple elements like dots
and dashes create patterns and become more complicated as first generation data
files are crossbred to create hybrid files. The graphic program is pushed beyond
its capabilities and in that process mutations occur. Presented as large-scale
projections, the perception of scale in The Liminal Series can be interpreted
simultaneously as vast and minute. These digital generations create an unfolding
display of transformation. Already apparent in this series of the ongoing project
is the dramatic results
that will
conclude the process of evolution.
As a snowfall descends upon a landscape of miniature tree stumps, a miniature
house covertly records this man-made climate in David McQueen's elaborate
installation, Untitled Snowfall: twice as big half as small. A live
feed of the artificial landscape is projected in an adjacent room and creates
another layer of dislocation as it presents an
image of nature twice
removed. Untitled Desert (particularly deserted) continues the question
of the relationship between technology and nature as it presents a landscape
of cacti that is artificially kept in a near constant state of darkness, denying
the natural process of growth. These cold and slightly sinister constructions
paradoxically create delicate and ephemeral moments, a contradiction that echoes
the inherent
duality of the universe.
With a labor-intensive process of painting delicate lines between numerous layers
of resin, Angie Drakopoulos creates scientifically hypothetical
structures of the universe. She derives her imagery from her research in biology,
chemistry and other various fields of science. A comprehensive diagram of the
micro and macro cosmic world emerges as she works towards defining the invisible
energy that governs all matter. Based on the structure of a standard 52-card
deck, Synthesis is a methodical visual system that conceptualizes a new unified
theory. In the animation Mythograph, that system is activated and reveals the
operating relationships
between
the
distilled forms.
Ian Burns investigates the act of observation and the cultural
impact of the glowing screen. By exposing the carefully crafted lo-tech mechanics
that create the images within his sculptures, his scenes do not seduce the eye;
they instead activate a sense of curiosity and question the mind's experience
of illusion. Lighting, camera angles and other methods of narration lifted from
divergent genres such as film noir and news broadcasting simulate the modern
day viewer experience. Reflective of the fragmented ways contemporary society
receives information, framed out viewing screens become points of entry to undisclosed
plots. The central conflict between the construction and the deconstruction of
the images allude
to the unpresentable.
An architectural form is placed within the rules of nature
as Caitlin Masley conceptualizes how the modernist urbanscape could function
as a self-contained growing organism. As she re-examines the grid in postwar
urban landscapes, appropriated facades of monumental buildings are abstracted
into patterns, multiplying and rearranging like microorganisms. In this series
of digital c-prints, the geometrical space of the Miyakonojo Civic Center is
restructured
and points to
the organic possibilities that exist within the grid.
The traditional space between
painting and viewer is deconstructed as Marci MacGuffie reinvestigates
the romantic
idea of the artist's hand. In her wall installation Arousing Conviction, magnetic
strips, made to resemble painterly brush marks, are arranged on the gallery wall.
The area has been coated with an iron infused paint, which creates the binding
medium,
ferromagnetic attraction. Drawing heavily from nature, the "brush marks" are
placed in an abstract pattern and viewers are invited to transform this image.
The constant mode of chance operation within this interaction is the underlying
vehicle of
the image's progression
and
ultimate
state.
Sam Martineau continually surveys society and his own vocabulary
as he experiments with different reference materials ranging from glossy magazine
advertisements of high-end commodities to sentimental photos. His selection of
imagery is an associative process. The paintings are made not as continuations
or variations of a formula but as challenges to prior paintings. Within each
individual painting, resolution is attained by a formal balance of polarities.
He challenges the narratives created within "projects" as he constantly
expands the vocabulary within his work by juxtaposing contrasting images and
traditional modes of painting. He creates these conflicts as a question to the
existence of absolute truth.
Back to Past Exhibitions
|
|
|