Works on paper, while a medium I use throughout my work, are a particular area of practice in the studio. I just uploaded some preparatory studies for my new Flora and Fauna Investigations, the body of work I have been working on since the fall. Here is an example on the right. You can see more images from this series here.
Sketches or preparatory works can help develop a kind of rhythm in the work, which is how I use them. I create a space for the development of a back and forth, a habitual or practice of mark making. The dots and squares painted here began as these simple sketches and evolved into the more complex works I am referring to as Flora and Fauna Investigations, formerly known as Rhizomatic Foam.
Showing posts with label works on paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label works on paper. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 20, 2013
Friday, March 01, 2013
Pink and Yellow Foam
This Foam Series has been occupying a lot of my mind and studio time lately. I had been calling the series Rhizomatic Foam, but as a title have decided to bench the term Rhizomatic. A little too obscure to be friendly and I am opting for friendly. I had thought this piece finished but am in new cycle of sending work around and needed to fully resolve some outstanding issues the piece still had before I felt OK about submitting it to a particular show I am interested in.
So, I pulled the piece out of the box it had been stored in for the past
couple of months and first cut a piece of foamboard a few inches smaller than the drawing/sculpture. I have been covering the foam board with patterned fabric that
creates an added layer under the structure of the drawing. This layer is actually a kind of pedestal, a way of asserting the piece forward slightly from
behind, thrusting it out into space a bit. The fabric is patterned with dots or in this case stripes. The black and white pattern add another dimension of information, texture and zip that I like under the white paper.
The ceramic and paper-clay balls on top further articulates the objectness I am after. Instead of a drawing, the piece has been transformed into an object or a thing through the added layer of balls and the foamboard. A piece of paper, working through the identity of
drawing, then painting and finally becoming sculpture brings the whole affair
into new territory.
Drawing as sculpture, sculpture as contemplative moment in
time and space, playing with notions of human-ness in the form of bubble, foam
or balls of ceramic, paper-clay painted and hanging on the piece, engaged with
symbols of nature iterate the impression of nature, standing in reserve, set
aside yet participating in the totality of the object, drawing as sculpture,
beautiful, mysterious, affectionate and entertaining, adding to the general
dialogue about being and time.
Wednesday, February 20, 2013
Rhizomatic Foam Boxes

I have been working on a new group of Rhizomatic Foam dimensional
collages. Reading Heidegger of late has inspired me to think about enframing
and a particular concept in Heidegger, destining. "Enframing is “destining”, from which
"the essence of all history is determined" (The Question Concerning Technology. 329).
Boxes have figured into my work for over 20 years. I looked at
slides (remember slides??) of earlier work today and showed Tatiana work I had
done in the early 90's. I made boxes out of wood back then, very sturdy and
permanent. Now I am making boxes out of refuse, old cardboard and strengthening
them with pages from an old encyclopedia. The layering of images over images,
revealing and concealing, excites me and also makes me curious about what is emerging.
This piece, as yet untitled beyond Rhizomatic Foam Box, includes several ideas I have been working with for a long time and a few new ones. As I mentioned, I used to make boxes years ago, so that is something not entirely new, but given the time lapse between then and now, is a recycling of an old idea, and certainly new in my use of recycled cardboard and old encyclopedia pages. Cutting birds out of the pages of an encyclopedia, new. The totally novel addition to this piece is the little clamp light on top of the box. They felt a little dark, all boxy and layered so I decided to try adding a small lamp to this piece. I am somewhat happy with the affect, we'll see how that pans out in future iterations.
Hopefully the work is not just an assertion but an
emergence of a poetic grammar that brings into focus images and objects that
ultimately make me happy to make. That is the reason I make art -- to make me
happy. It is also a pursuit, a journey, the unraveling of some sort of mystery.
Yet, the more I do, the larger the mystery becomes. It isn't so much revealed
as the revelation becomes wow! that is so hidden! Maybe if I do this... Sort of a never ending circling around, encircling and enframing, revealing and concealing, a dialectical back and forth over time that inspires, me at least and hopefully another. Art allows us to be with another, sharing the experience of a moment in front of a mutual object.
So, I am back into making boxes. I am making a tutorial, the
first of its kind, let's see how it goes. Part one to be published later this
week.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Dialectical Revival
This week has been another full week. Since the fall I have been developing a new body of work based on the idea of Rhizomatic Foam. Inspired by the idea of rhizome theory in Deleuze and Guattari's classic, A Thousand Plateaus, the image has fed me with countless lines of possible expression. As a maker, I am driven, almost obsessed with the desire to make. As a contemporary artist, I want to participate in the current dialogue and that is strongly conceptual. But, things evolve and art evolves in an amazing and most complex manner making it a very special place to call home.
Last week I had the privilege to participate in a
conversation in Chelsea at the Gasser and Grunert Gallery. Artist Alyce Santoro,
whose works are on view there through February 16, held a series of talks, no,
actual conversations called a Dialectical Revival. As a matriculating student,
bona fide PhD candidate, I have been reading my fair share of Hegel. His ideas
still compel us because they are so powerful? Perhaps they really touch on a depth
of thought that inclines to higher being.
Anyway, it was an exciting afternoon and inspired my week in
the studio. I resolved several issues in the Rhizomatic Foam pieces although I
still have a ways to go. I bought a box of 1/2 inch foam core and started
cutting it up and covering it with fabric. The drawings can then be affixed to
the foam core instead of the wall. Hammering nails into walls was a violent act
I used 20 years ago in an early work(s) but today I am much less inclined to
advocate the destruction of private property, i.e walls––Gallery walls, museum
walls or the walls in a collector's home. I think it changes the pieces dramatically
to reflect a friendlier me, a friendlier resolution to the issue of how to hang
a semi-sculptural drawing/collage.
On another note, yesterday I got my study ready for the new
semester. I need to stay focused for the academic work I am engulfed in or I
can get really lost. We are reading Heidegger on technology and Neitzche and Junger on Pain this week. I
am also making some headway on this semester's paper which will discuss fluid
economies vs. static economies and artists whose work I feel reflect a
proclivity toward the former. I'll try and post more about that in coming
weeks.
So, my goal for 2013 is post something here weekly. Saying
that out loud deepens my challenge so forgive me for engaging in such an obvious
ploy, but, I think it will help my thinking all around. I hope you will stay
tuned. Thanks for reading. :)
Thursday, September 20, 2012
Archiving
This week begins the arduous task of going through work, starting early on, photographing it, categorizing it, measuring it and putting it into a data system. My art practice is life long and I have accumulated quite a lot of flotsam and jetsom from that daily ritual. As a some time lone practitioner, I have developed whole bodies of work that have not seen the light of day in many a moon and therefore haven't been engaged in a critical, relational back and forth about their meaning. These critical discussions are essential components in an artist's development. I am looking forward to reviewing the work with the new addition to my studio, the very talented Tatiana Klacsmann, a skilled professional and begin getting back into a more robust interaction with a broader world in terms of some intimate work I have made over the past 20 years. Here is the beginning.
Part of the inspiration for this project stems from a resurgence in interest in this early work. This summer, Thompson Giroux Gallery in Chatham, NY showed a selection of these drawings in the group show, The Mysteries of Love and Life. I am honored to have part of this exhibition and glad to show these pieces, some for the first time ever.
So, there is a bit of history. Next, will be more the current work, this year, this fall and also last fall. Working with ideas being generated in my studies of philosophy. Reading Hegel and thinkers writing about Hegel. Today, Lacan.
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| Jacobs Ladder, 1992, 6" x 6", pencil and watercolor on paper, private collection |
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| Flock of Dots Skipping Rope, 1992, 6" x 6" pencil and watercolor on paper |
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| Form and Line Collision, 1992, 6" x 6" pencil and watercolor |
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| Lyrical Line Gesture #2, 1992, 6" x 6" watercolor and pencil on paper |
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| Lyrical Line Drawing #3, 1992, 6" x 6" watercolor and pencil on paper |
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| Lyrical Line Drawing, 1992, 6" x 6" watercolor and pencil on paper |
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