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Artists Mary Temple, Robert Ressler, Bill Schuck
, Liza McConnell, Itty Neuhause,
Kathleen Gilrain and Virginia
Beahan & Laura McPhee
Curated by Rebecca Graves
September 13 to October 26, 2003
In the upcoming exhibit "Landslide," Smack Mellon Gallery
presents the work of eight artists who use revisionary tactics
to approach the tradition of landscape art. Much of the work
turns that tradition on its head by creating physical and experiential
landscapes within the gallery setting, rather than showing realistic
representations of our natural world.
Bill Schuck has created a machine, akin to a medieval trebuchet
that lofts airborne powdered plaster throwing it into a corner
of the gallery. In this work entitled, "Surge," the
plaster meets with mist and over the course of the exhibit creates
a landscape not unlike a limestone cave from which the plaster
was originally mined.
Overhead in the highest reaches of the 40' gallery space, Kathleen
Gilrain uses moving air as her medium. The work is made physical
when the winds are caught in one-thousand one -hundred and fifty-two
brightly colored plastic bags that sway back and forth like the
breezes of late summer.
Rob Ressler quite literally begins his work with the landscape
using large cut trees and branches that he carves into elegant
elongated wooden sculptures that hang horizontally, as if free-floating
with the lightness of seed-pods in air.
In Mary Temple's "Window Sculpture" light and shadow
are cast on a large wall of the gallery from light filtering
through a window and the trees that surround it. When the viewer
turns to find the window, it doesn't exist, and it is in this
delightful moment of being duped that the conceptual wall-work
draws it irresistible power.
The power of the phenomenal landscapes of Iceland are projected
in a pair of adjoining tent-like structures in Itty Neuhaus' "Slip." the
gallery visitor becomes a participant rather than a viewer when
inside the tents, walking over boiling geothermal pools to look
up into a soaring shaft of glacial crevices, ice caves and icebergs.
The artist's journey to Iceland to film these phenomena took
place over the last year and the sense of the artist as adventurer
is evident.
The photographic team of Virginia Beahan and Laura McPhee have
also traveled to Iceland to record that dramatic landscape. The
human effect on the land is stunningly represented in these large-scale
pictures,††whether they are recording far-away, exotic
locals or those closer to home, such as a bridge in Trenton,
New Jersey.
Liza McConnell shows a touch of the alchemist in her ability
to take common hardware store materials and with the help of
lights and lenses create projected landscapes that awe and delight.
Using torn paper she convincingly presents "The Colorado
Front Range," which is presented here.
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