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Homegrown: southeast PDF

2005·3.5 MB·English
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Flowor Ho negrown: orminal leaflet I ■■■ r fr-: Adventitious rools i 1 . 'BIH^^ Homegrown: Southeast is a return to our roots and a return Homegrown* of which we are very proud. Many will recall that prior to ^southeast 1990, with the exception of our national Awards in the Visual Arts fellowship program, Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art SECCA's focus was the eleven- July 16 - September 30, 2005 state southeastern region and the artists living and working in - Ficv'<or this region. SECCA was noted for the outstanding regional artists that we showcased. This year's Homegrown: Southeast exhibition is i— "'Kmlnal leallei the third in the series of Homegrown exhibits. It is an expansion of the previous two exhibits that featured North Acknowledgments Carolina artists exclusively. The vision, expertise, and generosity of several individuals and galleries helped to make Homesrown: Southeast possible. Many thanks go to Patty and Malcolm Brov^n, Andreas H. Once again, we are pleased Bechtler, Dr. Murray D. List, Museum of Contemporary Art in Atlanta, Arthur Roger Gallery, to be able to re-visit our roots Jeff Bailey Gallery, Ambrosino Gallery, Dv^ight Hacket Projects, Kiang Gallery, Louise Ross and present some of the best Gallery, Numark Gallery, and G Fine Arts for graciously lending works for this exhibition. work being produced in the Thank you to every artist who submitted work for consideration for this exhibition. It was a joy to be able to see the quality and variety of artwork being produced in our Southeast today. Not only are region. I would also like to thank my colleagues Vicki Kopf and Terri Dowell-Dennis who we able to work again with a co-curated this exhibition with me. Your commitment, enthusiasm, and time have gone number of old friends but also a long way toward making this a truly successful endeavor. Many thanks go to the entire to show the wealth of new SECCA staff for their encouragement, interest, and assistance. 1 would like to thank Alyson Watts for her work in making this catalogue a reality and Maggie Morrison for her time artists who are at work in our and effort in designing this beautiful publication. Of course this exhibition could not have region. been completed without the tireless effort of our installations crew: Lyndon Bray, Gabby Cardall, Laura Lashley, Gaff Pearce, and Steve Tesh. Thank you all very much for, once again, installing a beautiful show. Vicki Kopf Lastly 1 would like to extend my thanks to every artist participating in this exhibition. It has Executive Director been a delight to work with each of you. 1 would like to extend a very special thank you to Annie Gawlak from G Fine Art and especially BB&T for making this catalogue possible. Joshua Rickards Curatorial Assistant Contemporary Voices of the American Southeast life -- while Jahncke allows himself to be a kind of visual conduit, processing the excess of information and stimulation Homesrown: Southeast is the third exhibition in that contemporary life offers. Loren Schwerd, in her Loveseat SECCA's biennial Homegrown series, which began in 2001 as series, transforms found wooden chairs into compelling works a vehicle for showcasing the work of North Carolina artists. about relationships. Using a computer as the generative tool, This year the exhibition has expanded; Homesrown: Southeast Joey Slaughter invents his own forms. These are sometimes 2005 includes artists from eleven southeastern states and the developed into three-dimensional environments that are District of Columbia. Artists selected for the exhibition were wholly contrived yet evoke associations with our known nominated by their peers: curators, critics, and other experts product-oriented world. in the field of contemporary art, from across the region. The tension between childhood and our adult memory Viewing the works chosen for this year's exhibition, of it is evident in Jacqueline Bishop's recent works utilizing a variety of themes emerge. Prominent among these are the found children's shoes and Beth Edwards's beautiful but odd notions of craft and narrative. Artists such as Elizabeth Brim, paintings of dolls and toys. An interest in biological science who uses traditional blacksmithing techniques to forge highly and how we understand our world metaphorically in relation feminine forms; Jim Neel, whose carved wooden sculptures to natural processes drives the works of Julie Davidow and are inspired by "sacred" experience; Imi Hwangbo, whose Mary Jane Parker. Current events and conceptual issues merge works combine technology and the handmade to reference in the works of Juan Logan and Marek Ranis. The sometimes traditional Korean designs; and Ed McGowin (aka T.M. beautiful and often unsettling relationship between nature Dossett), who utilizes a traditional Southeast Asian carving and civilization finds voice in Sonja Reiger's color photographs technique, exemplify this strong interest in craft traditions; of the Alabama night and James Welty's large sculptural wall their exquisitely constructed works, sometimes content laden, works. project a distinct awareness of the process of making. Identifiable themes abound in these works; yet the Narrative also figures as a prominent idea in these most striking observation to be made is recognition of each and many other artists' works. In fact, one could argue that artist's distinctly unique vision. In many cases the work is the absence of a sense of "story" would be the exception in heartfelt and personal, calling upon memory, as in llaSahai this exhibition. Sometimes the narrative structure is overt, Prouty's works that involve body casts or Bill Fields's meditations as in Cynthia Norton's installation/performance works that on human spirituality. Many artists, like Maggie Michael and reference the history of American folk music and culture, Alexander Kvares, approach their work as a dialogue between Tom Stanley's whimsical painted ships that are both personal self and materials, sometimes allowing the subliminal "noise" and fantastic, Ed McGowin's constructions that tell about his of daily living unfettered access to the process. Finally, the impressions of growing up white and Southern in a racially- twelve artists who make up the collective called Team Lump charged era. Brad Thomas's journalistic collage works, or exemplify the quest for finding new and meaningful ways to Amy Pleasant's paintings that utilize the storyboard structure foster creative communities, celebrating individual vision of animation and filmmaking. Other times the presence of while recognizing the power of collaboration. narrative is subtle, as in David Finn's evocative carved marble Taken as a whole. Homegrown: Southeast demon- Ghost series, or Monica Zeringue's delicate pencil drawings, strates that southeastern artists are working well within the which suggest obscure imaginary tales. mainstream of contemporary art practice. Their voices speak Abundance and excess, including the barrage- eloquently of what it means to be human and living in the like nature of twenty-first century life and its attendant twenty-first century. While some artists in the exhibition draw "stuff," influences another group of artists, among them Dan upon attributes of regional identity, such as craft, narrative, Steinhilber, Kirsten Kindler, Chris Jahncke, Loren Schwerd, or a sense of nostalgia, and celebrate those in a contemporary and Joey Slaughter, albeit in very different ways. Steinhilber's milieu, others make work that cannot be identified as works are formally elegant constructions made from the "southern," and in an increasingly global society, really could most mundane of materials, like multi-colored balloons, have been made anywhere. plastic eating utensils, or corrugated cardboard. Kindler finds inspiration in such things as ornate architectural details, Terri Dowell-Dennis rhinestone-embellished fingernails, and myriad variations Curator of Education on hubcaps -- the small extravagant notions of every day Jacqueline Bishop's works metaphoricaUy speak to notions of beauty and decay, life and death. Her installation entitled Losins Ground: Imaginary Landscapes comprises up to 29 pairs of found, painted, and otherwise altered baby shoes, poignantly speaking to the ambiguities and emotional complexities of childhood, a time as fleeting as the delicate, endangered or extinct natural species the artist depicts. Lost Objects. 2004 . artificial bud*. Pillow. 2000 forged and fabricated steel 12 X 10 X 3 inches * Using traditional blacksmithing techniques, Elizabeth Brim creates highly feminine forms. Referencing the work of her mother and grandmother before her, Brim's works speak to femininity and narrative in her own unique and non-traditional way. Julie Davidow employs biomorphoric imagery in her paintings and installation works that seem to grow right on the wall, transitioning, growing, mutating, and reproducing. Her works reflect her interest in microbiology, marine biology, and other natural sciences. Rf-.er/ni, Host »4, 2003 acrylic and latex on unstre'.ched canvas 18 K 2-) inches Oceola. 2003 urethane and wood 44 X 33 X 90 inches In 1971, Ed McGowin developed a series of pseudonyms, based on his theory about the development of art history as a pluralistic model: each fictitious artist produced a different style of work. Thornton M. Dossett, one of McGowin's alter egos, continues to create narrative works in a southern vernacular style, often referencing the difficult racial issues that he encountered growing up in Mississippi during the Civil Rights era. 4 P^. Beth Edwards's paintings reveal a fascination with childhood and domestic environments. Her images of dolls and toys possess a decidedly surreal quality, and the artist doesn't let us forget that adults created these toys - with children in mind. Hermes Trismesistus, 2003 prismacolor, pastel/paper 30 x 22 inches Sundown, 2004 oil on canvas 38 X 32 inches William Fields creates intricate drawings inspired by meditative journeys and his lifelong study of non-Western religious texts, oracles, and practices, including the I Ching, Theosophy, Gnosticism, and other traditions. David Finn's Ghost comprises a series of oversized carved white marble shoes, often installed in public settings. Each shoe is a solo remnant, evocative of a bygone time. Beautiful and incomplete as pairs, they conjure voices, stories, and nostalgia for the past. Alusp, 2005 Ghost (group installation) archival ink on hand-cut mylar marble ix 6x ,5 inches dimensions variable Imi Hwangbo creates constructed drav/ings of translucent mylar, derived from the patterns and color schemes of Korean v/rapping cloths, folk paintings, and personal ornamentation. The works are highly labor-intensive, combining the control of digitally printed imagery with the expressiveness of hand manipulation. Chris Jahncke says that his paintings are about "both nothing and anything . . . and the inevitable tension between these two r ideas." Sometimes "loaded" with imagery, sometimes spare, Si Jahncke's works are subliminally influenced by sources as diverse as television, nature, and simple doodles. Large J\imb\BV4ee<i. 2005 cut paper on canvas 90 X 62 inches -I ^ A - - - >*nyfhing y^nywhere, 20O4 oil on canvas 49 X 54 inches /r. n V 1 The ordinary, yet opulent or effusive gestures of daily living provide inspiration for Kirsten Kindler's cut paper installations and paintings. The artist explores abundance and elaborate forms of ornamentation: these elements form the foundation for artworks that are both formal and quirky. I <.V5S Alexander Kvares's drawings reveal his interest in a visually associative type of narrative that is illogical and unstructured. The artist experiences the world intuitively and allows his drawings to emerge in a similar fashion, revealing his conscious and subconscious fascinations. Complicity, 2004 vintage WWII stoneware and flatware dimensions variable Untitled (Showcase), 2003 graphite and gel pens on paper 9x12 inches The banality of evil is the subject of Juan Logan's Complicity. An elegant and innocuous-seeming table setting, closely observed, reveals the subtle insignia of the Third Reich, the swastica. These porcelain dinner plates have been cared for and preserved, made available on the world market, and are here displayed as a reminder that the lessons of history cannot be ignored. ft Maggie Michael thinks of her canvases as "locations" - each painting a world unto itself. She uses commercial paints, mis- tints and handpicked colors, as the elements with which she charts her voyage, adding and manipulating the painted surface until something either satisfying or unexpected emerges. '1 Leasti, 2003 latex, ink and enamel on canvas 72 X 96 inches Whirlwind, 2003 enf and urethane on wood 66 X 66 X 150 inches In addition to his work as a sculptor, Jim Nee! has been a photojournalist in Central America and Appalachia. His sculptures (drawings and prints) are a way of reflecting on some of the life- changing revelations he has experienced in the course of his travels. The artist says, "The works in this group are about the struggle between the rational and the spiritual, between fact and faith."

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