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Artists Kim Beck, Marina Berio, George Boorujy,
John Bowman, Emilie Clark,
Renee Delores, Kalika Gorski, Jeff Grant, Bettina Johae, Joan Linder,
Rita MacDonald, Conor McGrady, Ben Polsky, Kako Ueda, and Katarina Wong
Curated by Summer McCorkle
April 2 – May 15, 2005
Charged with an artists' intentions and desire to convey a multi-faceted idea
or a complex emotion, the smallest drawing can become larger than life and the
largest drawing a personal keepsake. This exhibition explores the many approaches
artists take to drawing representationally, in and outside of traditional methods,
ranging in subject matter, material and scale. The materials span from graphite
and gouache to plaster etching and paper cuttings. Scale ranges from the size
of a sheet of paper to employing a 20-foot wall. Influences from nature to architecture,
photography, the written word and the idea of place reflect the broad scope of
this intriguing and adaptable medium.
Emilie Clark utilizes a mid-19th century book
by a woman botanist named Mary Ward, written in letter form
to an unknown “Emily”. Based solely on Ward's written
descriptions of her observations under the microscope, Clark
brings to life these scientific findings through her watercolor
and graphite drawings. Though still recognizable, these drawings
of insects and plants act less as scientific evidence and more
as artistic interpretation. As the project progressed, Clark
felt a strong affinity to Ward. Attempting to address issues
of art, science, religion and the role of women that surfaced
while working on the project, Clark responds to Ward's letters
with her own, presented here in book form.
Jeff Grant presents two drawings in graphite
of the giant squid. Scarcely visible on a paper reminiscent
of cloudy seawater, his squid is obscured as it might be found
in the sea. Legend and folklore such as Alfred Lloyd Tennyson's The
Kraken have replaced scientific observation of this elusive
creature, as any attempts to observe it in the sea or bring
it to the surface alive have always failed. Through his drawings,
Grant conveys this same mystery and wonder that surround the
squid itself.
Kako Ueda's beautiful, intricately cut paper
drawings contain an inner garden that overloads the senses with
imagery that is seductive and turbulent. Using organic representations
of body organs, insects, animals and vegetation, Ueda explores
notions of illness and the body as an eco-system that must be
kept in balance, based on the science of traditional Eastern
medicine.
George Boorujy investigates a different balancing
act, where nature and humankind overlap resulting in the unnatural.
Beached seals lounge around decaying buildings; grasshoppers
perch ominously on windswept grass near a vacated car in a barren
land; a deer hangs in an unnatural position as the victim of
a hit and run. Each scene represents the ebb and flow of this
co-dependent yet mutually destructive relationship.
Katarina Wong presents a 7-foot white-on-white
drawing invisible from straight on. Quiet waves, reminiscent
of a water pattern from classic Chinese art, are only revealed
when sought after. Wong also includes small graphite drawings
on denril vellum of imagery recorded during numerous flights
from New York to North Carolina. As in her wave piece, these
drawings reward patience, as seemingly pure abstractions give
way to land masses and cloud forms. Hung a few inches away from
the wall, the drawings undulate as they respond to the air-flow
and body movement of the viewer.
Growing upwards into the 40-foot clerestory is Joan Linder's ink
and pen drawing of a giant blue tree. This drawing is part of a series of four,
created from direct observation and stylized after Asian landscape painting.
All the trees were drawn on-site at various locations in the United States. This
specific tree lives in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Bettina Johae's site-specific project Borough
Edges, NYC remaps the five New York City boroughs based
on waterfront accessibility inferred from excursions around
the perimeter of each. The large map that results, transferred
here directly on the wall, is an abstracted rendition of New
York as we know it. Johae also plays a slide show of images
systematically shot along the way, revealing New York City defined
outside of its famous landmarks. This is the New York of gated
communities, ship cemeteries, hazardous waste dumps, beach-front
property and sleepy neighborhoods, exoticized as any unfamiliar
place would be.
Through containment onto a surface, John Bowman holds onto a
treasured place by recreating a cathedral, plaza or opera house from it that
he felt an affinity with. These gigantic charcoal erasures, whose details
emerge from pure blackness by erasing, replace the small trinket souvenir with
a photographic-like image encapsulating memory that is almost palpable. Here,
Bowman will present one of his erasures applied directly on the balcony wall.
Ben Polsky similarly uses his drawings as a
method for re-creating an adventure or place he has explored.
Seeking out derelict buildings that stand as relics to the industrial
past, Polsky surveys the site by photographing it. These photos
act as a temporary reference for transferring his experience
onto paper and to the viewer by drawing it out. Polsky presents
two drawings here, one with architecture and function reminiscent
of Smack Mellon's own past; the other a structure reduced to
rubble.
In Kim Beck's work, another utilitarian building is contemplated:
the storage shed. Beck draws and redraws, cuts and layers these typically bland
structures until they become overwhelming and dizzying. This technique recalls
America's own patterns of over-accumulation and consumption. We find we have
to transfer our excesses to a no man's land of overabundance, contained in tiny
uniform structures that are slowly but persistently taking over the American
landscape.
Renee Delores presents a site-specific installation-based
drawing that references architectural details of the gallery.
She also seeks out the decaying, romantic parts of Dumbo that
are slowly disappearing, transferring bits and pieces of it
into the space. These create a backdrop for mysterious creatures
that lurk in their own shadows.
Remembering patterns from bits of fabric, wallpaper and other domestic details, Rita
MacDonald draws upon personal history to create her drawings. For her
large-scale wall relief, a pattern evoked from household architectural decorations
are applied in plaster directly onto the wall. MacDonald merges the architecture
of the new site with her memory of the old, bringing her experience of that site
directly to the viewer. Also included are smaller recordings of childhood clothing.
These recreations of fabric are drawn at actual size, without color or exaggeration,
and focus on the small details that imply the body beneath.
Also working from memory, Conor McGrady strips away details
in his large-scale gouache drawings of housing blocks in Northern Ireland, leaving
them without visible signs of domestication. These complexes, built with utopian
ideals in mind, were redesigned to ensure the containment of an insurgent population.
McGrady exposes these buildings for what they are- areas devoid of private space,
subject to repeated invasion, search procedures and surveillance. McGrady continues
his investigation of hidden violence with three drawings of lonely woods that
have witnessed some course of unspeakable events.
Kalika Gorski is interested in the portrayal
of women fighters, from fictional legends to real-life insurgents.
Gorski presents small drawings of real women fighters, from
the IRA to the Zapatistas, as quiet dedications to women all
around the world who would live and die for what they believe
in. Along with these, Gorski installs a 14-foot wall drawing
made of ink washes to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the
bombing of Hiroshima/Nagasaki that falls in August.
Marina Berio's charcoal fireworks reflect imagery
from Gorski's installation. Working from photographic negatives,
Berio presents a symbol of celebration whose violent explosions
of light allude to destruction and decay. Berio also uses imagery
from the road, taking over-familiar roadside shubbery and abstracting
into unrecognizable masses, giving one an uneasy feeling of
being lost on a dark, lonely highway.
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