Wednesday, July 23, 2014

You Can't Make Pink With Out Red . . . .


“You can not make pink with out red.”
This simplistic yet important quotation from a fellow student stands out as a bridge from my work last semester, concerning femininity, cartoon imagery and a heavy dose of pink, and my work this semester, which has veered down a darker road in content and value. This semester’s studio work was based around a single image, the chest tube connected to my mother. I was unsure how these very personal works would be received. The work I brought to this residency can be divided into three main sections; photographs of experiments with bubbles, abstract works on Mylar created with paint, ink and various non traditional art materials and third, a collaboration between cartoon inspired drawings and abstract cut outs of Mylar. The responses were overall very positive.
The bubble photographs received very positive responses early in the residency. They were described as remarkable and as having the ability to stop you in your tracks. Comparisons included nipples, bruises, cancer cells and pubic hair. The more abstract photographs were seen as stronger than ones easily decipherable as bubbles, which I agree with. While some felt that the bubbles stood strongly on their own, others felt that they did not fit in with the rest of my work.  Generally it was agreed that I should continue with these experiments as a side project, as they may become a resource or come to inform future work.



The Second category of work consisted of abstract works on Mylar created with paint, ink, and many other non-traditional materials. These works were based directly off of the image of a chest tube. My main question about these works was whether or not they could stand on their own or if something was missing. The majority of feedback warned of generic looking pours and a large history of female painters involved with pours. If I am to use pours in my work they must be unique to me. Other feed back included the installation of the pieces – that the Mylar should be farther from the wall to create larger shadows, or that the Mylar should be closer too the wall to make the work more substantial and less fragile. I was also warned about making work that is purely cathartic. However the general thought was that these pieces were a necessary step in my process.

            The third and best-received sections of work were the cartoon style drawings and cut outs of the poured paint and ink on Mylar. These were seen as the most interesting and to hold promise potential. It was recommended that I create a tension between the drawing and the Mylar allowing the cartoon to enter into the pour and the pour into the cartoon. The central placement of the image on the white paper background was seen by some as too graphic but others felt it worked well, Deb Todd Wheeler pegged this (white background and central image) as my “go to move” and encouraged me to try other solutions for backgrounds. She suggested taking photographs of textures in the outdoors and using those as a place for drawings and paintings to take place on.
            The small and intimate scale of these pieces was seen as a reflection on intimate relations between family members in difficult situations. Perhaps the most poignant comment concerned the quality of my line. It was said to feel generic and borrowed rather than my own unique line, that my work must to be more than just well drawn. I need to personalize the formal language further. This is something I will work on specifically this semester.
             The question “why all the red” came up several times over the residency. I explained that the work was based on blood, this lead into many interesting conversations about blood, particularly in a religious sense. Religion has always been a part of my life but I never thought about it in terms of art previously. Religious relics were discussed as well as the idea of my mother’s blood as a relic. Blood is seen at once holy and impure.  My decision to represent only the “squishy splat” parts of the body was also discussed, as was the notion about the body fragmented. Tony Apesos questioned my choice to represent my mother’s body fluids rather than create a portrait of her. It does seem an odd focus in retrospect. One person suggested creating stand in reoccurring characters for my mother and I.
            Surrealism was suggested as an avenue of research and exploration. The gesture towards meaning present in my current work was seen as not enough and that the work needs to become not formally complex but complex in its meaning. I also need to be clear about what I want to say and be able to verbalize this to a greater degree.
            Themes and ideas that were seen in my work by others include; mortal parents, childish wishful thinking, religious associates with blood, illness, vulnerability, death, sexy, beauty, the grotesque, danger and intimacy, sexy and the disgusting, violence, abjection, elegance and the unconscious. 
            Over the coming semester I plan to work on the quality and nuances in my drawings and lines. Suggestions include letting lines be blurry, dissolving lines as well as adding scratches and marks. The addition of printmaking to the drawings and pours was suggested, even creating rubber stamps out of linoleum. I will continue with the bubbles as a side project, as this was the general consensus and see if leads to something interesting. Creating scans of the bubbles was another idea. I plan to explore different surfaces to work with other than the one shiny Mylar I used this semester possibly mirrors, Plexiglas and frosted Mylar. I will also experiment with different ways of installing the Mylar. Creating an installation was a suggestion echoed many times and installations have always been of great interest to me.


            Suggested readings for this semester include; Julia Kristeva Powers of Horror; An Essay on Abjection, Mary Douglas’ Purity and Danger; An Analysis on Concepts of Pollution and Taboo as well as Caroline Walker Bynum’s Wonderful Blood; Theology and Practice in Late Medieval Northern Germany and Beyond.

Artists suggested over the residency include; Arturo Herrera, Amy Cutler, Ken Price, Carrie Moyer, Carroll Dunham, Morris Louis, Ghada Amer, Paul Jenkins, Kevin Bake, Jacqueline Humphries, Helen Frankenthaler, Mark Ryden, Martin Wong Marilyn Minter, Maya Freelon, Kara walker, Annette Messager, Greg Thompson, Raul Gonzalez