Thursday, September 19, 2013

Reevaluations







These are some reevaluations of the Kendaia installation that I am considering. I am incorporating the vellum envelopes onto the screens and laying out my prints in front of the screens. Kanishka Raja suggested that I work toward complicating the arrangement of parts in the installation to enhance a more nuanced reading of the site. To this point, I am including the material research I have done for the Kendaia book in the envelope inserts.The screens are propped up against the wall and directly engage with the prints on the floor.  The dynamic between the wall and floor is emphasized in this arrangement, and extends the notion of both ground plane and horizon.  The envelopes add to the sense of absence and presence, as folded/seen/unseen materials hidden in plain sight.  I am imagining the prints to have their white borders removed, and covered with a large sheet of plexiglass with a painted grid on it.  The topographic forms will seemingly float on this gridded map, on which copper-foiled stones are placed in a spiral. 

The next project I hope to finish for the thesis show is a spiraled scroll piece, which will hang from the ceiling, and will include 10 - 12 large printed panels with encaustic.  Here are some of the visuals I will be using in this installation.  I have them spread out on the floor of the studio for now.






The complexity of the Kendaia site is endlessly fascinating to me, especially as I revisit these images. They represent an amazing confluence of history, natural phenomena, and cultural overlays. I am thinking a lot about Rauschenberg and Smithson as I begin this phase of the project.

Thursday, August 15, 2013

First Draft Submitted--YAY!

Three outlines and three edited revisions later, I emailed my draft to John Kramer today.  YAY!  I feel such a big relief and a sense of accomplishment.  Like any work of art, though, the process involves many stages and will require more editing and revisions before it's ready for submission for the degree. I still want to read about ten more books and start working on a large scroll piece before the second draft is underway. A quick three-day trip to help my son Julian and his wife Gina move into their new house in Rhode Island will be a nice respite from sitting at the computer for so many weeks. 

Here are some of the new photographs that were taken by my photographer friend Andrew Gillis.  Many of them will end up in the artist talk.  Andrew did a great job!






























Thursday, August 1, 2013

Thesis Writing and Installation in the Church

There is positive news on the thesis front.  John has given the go ahead to start writing the thesis--YAY!  After three versions of the outline, and with John's expert guidance, I had one of those "ah-ah" moments when I figured out how structure the writing around the images to create a meaningful narrative-- not just a boring research report.  The outline is at least a workable one, and so now the writing begins.

It has taken me a month to get to this moment.  It has helped to spatially lay out the images and relevant words/text next to each image, and then I could start constructing a visual narrative that made sense to me. All the elements were moveable, so endless variations ensued.  In the end, the spatial/visual model was what worked for me.

On a parallel plane of action, I was able lay out the visuals/text in a wonderful church-turned-gallery next door to my house.  Below I have included images of the building and the gallery where I am working on my thesis.  I feel very blessed to be using this wonderful space.  And it is possible that my husband and I will be buying the building sometime this fall/spring!  I have needed a larger studio space and venue for showing my work for a long time.  I hope to continue reaching out to my extended community, as I have done with the Ink Shop Printmaking Center in Ithaca,  in meaningful ways.  We are located on the Finger Lakes wine trail, surrounded by a large number of top-notch wineries that produce some of the finest red and white wines in the country. My hope is to create a place - indeed a PLACE -  that has serves many purposes (music, theatric performances, movies, farmer's market???) but above all a place to celebrate artists and their creations, including mine!

Here is the beginning phases of the installation and thesis work spread out on the floor!








                                                          The sanctuary downstairs:





                                                         
                                                             Kitchen-to-be:


                                                          Stairway up to the gallery:


                                                          Outside views of the church:


Sunday, July 14, 2013

The Screen

Completed right before the June residency, this screen consists of four panels made of plywood, maple, chestnut wood, digital prints, acrylic paint, and graphite text.  Each concave/convex unit is interchangeable and can be configured either in a serpentine or half-circle fashion.  The piece is a confrontation of points of view, with a paradoxical confluence of photographically-rich surfaces and voided discarded objects from the Kendaia site. The representation of place unfolds in both a visual and verbal manner.  Finding the meaning of place involves a multi-faceted dimensional experience, in part revealed/concealed. 

The Encounter


What is the sense of place? Through the hand-pulled print and the photograph, I examine the intersection between the individual and nature in the experience of particular places.   Social, cultural, and historical trajectories sometimes collide at these moments of the encounter.  My work explores the complexity of lived experience, in terms of immediate materialities, the nature of perception, and apparent absences. By various means and through multiple approaches, my work investigates the act of experiencing place from different points of view. Each image thus expresses an element of experience.  I create productive tensions between orientation and disorientation, frozen moments and duration, original and copy, image and text, in order to re-imagine and find meaning in my relationship to the world. The muttivalent character of my creative explorations shows a complex negotiation between idea, materials, historic fact, perceptual nuance, and mediated image. These encounters convey an existential uncertainly about my place in the world.  Finding place is in a sense, then, about finding myself. Nature, culture, and self are all part of the experience of place. This is where I unfold the meaning of presence.
The Event of the Red Cup
I begin with Kendaia, a historic place in upstate New York. My home is just a twenty minute drive away. I am here to visit the site of an old Iroquois village ravaged by Generals Sullivan and Clinton in the late 1700s, during the era when colonists were expanding their power and control over areas of the Northeast.  I initially drive past the site without seeing the NYS marker nor the stone monument that are there.  The presence of a picnic table, no littering signs, and two markers indicating State Park property verify that this is the place I am seeking.  For material evidence of the Iroquois who once lived here, there is nothing.  I know that the Iroquois sided with the British during the Revolutionary War.  I know of the Sullivan/Clinton Trail that follows the eastern shore of Seneca Lake, snaking past my house on Route 414, where another NYS marker is placed acknowledging the Iroquois site Con-Daw-Haw. The Kendaia monument mentions the hostile Indian nations whom the commemorated Generals were sent to abolish. A map of the region shows the trail of scorched earth established by the orders of President Washington. I am not convinced that the monument's commemoration tells the whole story. I wander around the perimeter of the mowed lawn of the site, alone with the entanglements of tree, detritus, stream, wild raspberry and grapevine, blue sky, fresh air.  A flicker of red appears--a red cup.  It is somehow not surprising, maddingly unfortunate yes, and certainly out of place.  The no litter signs should have been adequate to remind visitors of their responsibilities.
But then something else about the red cup halted my wandering. The uniqueness of the moment where the red cup, me, the absent Iroquois, trees, blue sky, picnic table, and state park converge in this place. I needed to understand how this is to be; what were the reasons for both the absence of material history and the presence of a red cup to appear in this paradoxical fashion, demanded my attention.  Questions about place as an eventmental site for the production of meaning became clear.  Historic memory, perceptual experience, and the mediated image become the focus of my work.  The red cup is both the end and the beginning of the journey.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Kendaia Series

I have been working on this series Kendaia for most of the semester.  Kendaia is an Iroquois site about 20 minutes from where I live.  This place is a multivalent confluence of historical, cultural, and historical events, and in the words of philosopher Edward Casey is "eventmental".  This series  I use my own documentary photographs as a record of the site, which then are further mediated through a paper lithography process, where each color is separately printed, layer over layer.  The mediation reflects the layered content of the site. The printing process causes a perceptual blur, which obscures the visual definition of the various elements in the image. In each print I also include a bit of trash -- a cup, a bottle, cans, styrofoam, or a cigarette case. Perceptually the space is vibrantly alive with texture and color, but it also includes inherently these odd inclusions.  This "horizontal" portrayal of the materialities of life are juxtaposed with ghostly skin-like drawn forms that are sewn on, transparently revealing the ground beneath.  These images beg the questions: What is real? What is seen or not seen? Who is seeing? Are we in a suspended moment of time? 

Here is a peak of some of them.  They are still a work in progress, and will hopefully be completed by the June residency!  There are seven of them in this series.  A second taller (67 inches) Kendaia series with eight panels will be coming soon as well!  I wish I had another month to finish all of these!