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Mary Temple
The Forest for the Sea
Liza McConnell
Compound
Exhibition Dates September 30th – November
12th, 2006
A certain type of magic is the best way to describe Mary
Temple's and Liza McConnell's new installations premiering at
Smack Mellon on September 30th. These two Brooklyn artists employ
the subtle use of light and shadow in work that dances around
the idea of perception making one wonder what might or might
not really be there. Despite their shared sensibilities – they
both create illusions albeit
using completely different mediums – and the elegant paring
of these two solo shows in Smack Mellon's colossal new space,
these two artist's work couldn't be more opposite.
Using a low-tech arrangement of lights, lenses and ordinary
objects, Liza McConnell creates virtual environments
without recourse to digital technology and powerful projectors.
Mysterious, yet familiar landscapes emanate from strange, glowing
assemblages and rudimentary mechanisms. Liza transforms the mundane
into the magical using no recorded film or pixels.
Mary Temple's fake shadows of a non-existent
world have a verisimilitude that is uncanny. She makes strikingly
exquisite wall paintings that function as installation. Mary
creates the shadows of an exterior world, painted directly on
the interior walls of the space, as if bright sunlight is casting
late afternoon shadows through a landscape that is not there.
Mary will create a site-specific painting on our 24-foot high
by 60-foot long wall.
These new pieces are being created for Smack
Mellon's newly renovated “boiler building” – the original
steam generation power plant for the neighborhood in the 1800's – an
imposing, monumental industrial space. It has been left purposefully
raw to allow artists the greatest freedom of movement. Situated
between the Brooklyn and Manhattan Bridges across the street
from the waterfront Brooklyn Bridge Park, if you haven't
seen the NEW Smack Mellon yet, Liza and Mary's show is the reason
to get down to Dumbo. Liza McConnell and Mary Temple will be
the fifth exhibition since the inauguration last fall of Smack
Mellon's new home.
This exhibition is made possible with public funds from the City
of New York Department of Cultural Affairs and the New York
State Council on the Arts, a state agency, and with generous
support from Smack Mellon's Members, the Jerome Foundation,
Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro, and Richard Massey. Smack Mellon
also receives generous support from the National Endowment
for the Arts, The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts,
The Greenwall Foundation, Independence Community Foundation,
Jean and Louis Dreyfus Foundation, Inc., Lily Auchincloss Foundation,
Inc., Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation, New York Community
Trust, Robert Sterling Clark Foundation Inc., and The Starry
Night Fund of Tides Foundation. Space for Smack Mellon's programs
is generously provided by the Walentas Family and Two Trees
Management.
Public Transportation to Smack Mellon: F train to
York Street, A/C train to High Street,
B61 Bus to York and Gold.
Mary Temple
The Forest for the Sea
“Walking through the streets of DUMBO one is acutely aware of being
near the water's edge. The looming bridges prompt the association, of course,
and the air moves like it's near water…a light breeze stirs it. Still,
beyond those reminders, one just senses the water. It is signified by glittery
light in the distance, as one looks out the large picture window of Smack
Mellon's front gallery. Inside the exhibition space is a forest of
columns that separate ceiling from floor. Standing in this room I wondered
if it would be possible to provide the columns with a canopy of leaves and
to trade the sense of sparkly blue for shady and cool.
In The Forest for the Sea I want to alter the perception
of the gallery environment by engaging the viewer's memory, specifically
past experiences of light intersecting space. By utilizing trompe l'oeil
painting, I aim to convince the viewer that a painted image is in reality
light from a northern window and silhouettes from a stand of trees. As viewers
begin to solve the visual puzzle and understand the reality of the environment,
they are often surprised that they were taken in by a simple illusion¾that
their senses were so untrustworthy. By undermining something as basic as
perceptual faith, I mean to address the vulnerability of firmly held beliefs.”
Mary Temple has recently had one person exhibitions at Mixed Greens, Aldrich
Museum, Martin Museum of Art, Baylor University, and Arts Club of Washington.
Her work has been included in exhibitions at Zilkha Gallery, Wesleyan University,
The Jewish Museum, SculptureCenter, Artenova-Fuoriuso, Lungomare sud, Pescara,
Italy, Berkshire Museum, University Art Museum, U of Albany, and Feigen Contemporary.
Mary Temple is the 2006 recipient of the Lily Auchincloss Fellowship in Painting
from the New York Foundation for the Arts.
Liza McConnell
Compound
“Compound uses an optical principle similar to that of a camera
obscura: an image is projected in real-time via small apertures and simple
lenses. But unlike a camera obscura, the illusion does not emanate from the
world outside, but is the coinciding effect of carefully arranged, simply
contrived materials and the viewers‚ inclination to perceive a landscape
or spatial realm where one is implied.”
Liza McConnell has been an artist-in-residence at several organizations across
the United States, including the Sculpture Space, The Mattress Factory, Bemis
Center for Contemporary Arts, The Headlands Center for the Arts, Smack Mellon
Studios, Triangle Arts Association, CUE Art Foundation and the Center for Land
Use Interpretation. Recently her work has been exhibited at The Drawing Center,
Mattress Factory, Bronx Museum, The Berkshire Museum, D.U.M.B.O. Arts Center,
The Islip Art Musuem Carriage House, The Bronx Museum and the Kunstverein Langenhagen,
Germany.
This fall, Liza's work will be part of an exhibition called Substance and
Light: 10 Sculptors Use Cameras at the Munson Williams Proctor Institute
in Utica, NY.
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