November 3-27, 2005
Beyond The Categories:
A Paint Print Dialogue
Featuring the work
of
Peggy
Badenhausen
Joel Janowitz
Catherine Kernan
Peik Larson
Michael Mazur
Heddi Siebel. |
curated by Ilana Manolson
The
Concord Art Association presents Beyond
The Categories: A Paint/Print Dialogue, a show of six
established artists who generate imagery from the discourse between
two inherently different media--painting and printmaking. The show has
been curated by Ilana Manolson, an established painter and print-maker.
On
Friday, November 11 at 7 pm, the Concord Art Association at will host
a panel discussion Beyond the Categories with Michael Mazur, Peggy Badenhausen,
Joel Janowitz, Peik Larson, and Heddi Siebel. Moderator by exhibit curator
Ilana Manolson, the panel will explore the interactions of the paint-print
media with a focus on both content and process. The panelists will use
their own works in the surrounding gallery as illustration to the discussion.
Following the panel, there will be an opportunity to talk with the artists.
It
is said that when you speak a foreign language you become a different
person. And perhaps, it is the transitional moment of “becoming
that other person” a back and forth from one language to
another-- which can most deeply inform us about ourselves. Here, six
artists-- Michael Mazur, Catherine Kernan, Peik Larsen, Heddi Siebel,
Joel Janowitz, and Peggy Badenhausen--shift effortlessly between the
different vocabularies and syntax of two languages--painting and printmaking.
Painting is a medium known for its directness, its intuitiveness, and
its limitless versatility in surface, color and scale. Printing, on
the other hand, is indirect; the image must be processed before it can
be printed, and then, when transferred to paper, the image is reversed.
Yet, more often than not, it is the very constraint of printmaking that
fathers its unexpected results. Fluent in the languages of both painting
and printmaking, the artists of Beyond The Categories cross reference
the two media distinctively and personally. They bring the quickness
of the painter’s brush to the copper etching plate, or make unique
prints by combining paint with the reversed images, the negative spaces,
and the separate layers so familiar to the print process.
Michael
Mazur, an artist known internationally for his figurative work and evocative
landscapes, shows new work from his Diary. These bright, totemic images
of life are veritable paint/prints that combine spray paint and stencil
to achieve unsettling and novel results.
Catherine
Kernan defies printmaking’s constraints of scale by constructing
sixteen 12” squares into a dramatic, super-size grid. A landscape
moment of water and vines takes on consequence as she delicately layers
printed forms with translucent paint in her piece Lyrical Linear #3.
“Whether these pieces appear to be one or the other [painting
or prints] should be irrelevant to their impact.”, says Kernan.
Peik
Larsen picks up on printmaking’s characteristic layering of transparent
color, and uses it in both print and painting to animate graceful forms.
In
Pool Figure, a vertical landscape etching, Heddi Siebel takes what she
learns from the fresh stroke of the paintbrush into the acid bath of
the etching; and then celebrates the medium by impressing the paper
with printmaking’s saturated inky blacks.
Like
a larger than life window into a supernatural world of transfigured
common objects, artist Joel Janowitz combines etching with multiple
layers of soft paint to make Hanging Plants, a one of a kind monoprint.
“Monoprint
allows an idea to evolve over the course of many prints, echoes of each
other.” says Peggy Badenhausen. Printmaking has led her to a series
of paintings using calligraphic notations of dance in rhythmic iterations.
Yet, she adds, “painting has made me interested in unique prints,
not editions.”
Whether
or not their dialogue focuses on process or concept, these experienced
printmaker/painters use the media to startle themselves into an unfamiliar
world, and to surprise the viewer with new language that is greater
than the sum of its parts.