Material Process
Curated by Peter Gynd
Opening Reception: Saturday, October 21, 2017, 6–8pm
Material Process is a multimedia exhibition of artworks by eleven artists working at TI Art Studios in Gowanus/Redhook Brooklyn. The artists in this exhibition—Jacob Faber, Judy Hugentobler, Sara Jones, Katherine Keltner, Kakyoung Lee, Casey Lin, Janice McDonnell, Spencer Merolla, AV Ryan, Traci Talasco, and Alexa Williams—present a variety of works ranging in use of materials from en plein air oil painting, to found object constructions, ceramic sculpture, and video installation.
The exhibition speaks to how materials and process hold influence on an artistic practice and
the ways in which each artist dictates their own aesthetic and conceptual sensibilities through their media. Organized in conjunction with the annual Gowanus Open Studios, the reception for Material Process will coincide with the opening of artists workspaces to the public throughout the weekend of October 21-22.
About the artists in the exhibition:
Jacob Faber works with found wood and objects to create sculptures that suggest, or invite an interaction. The materials in his works are used in the condition which they were found in order to preserve the detailed impressed left upon them from their previous life. These details, along with their new sculptural forms, build narratives on the history and lifespan of an object beyond its original and intended use.
Judith Hugentobler’s ceramic works are inspired by landscape and the naturalistic textures found in them. She works with slab building techniques which allow her to enhance and articulate surface irregularities as the clay hardens, giving her vessels an organic sensibility within a cultivated form.
Sara Jones works with textiles, fabrics and threads in her paintings which examine the fluid borders between our memory and the spaces we inhabit. The formal repetition of the grid in her work is a literal reference to weaving, yet also metaphorically references a screen, or scrim: something that allows some things to flow through, but prevents others from entering or crossing the boundary.
Katherine Keltner explores order and randomness in her works and how images both construct and destruct a sense of identity. Her paintings are created using light washes of paint to capture a trace of objects from her immediate surroundings like scraps of paper, old drawings, and remnants from the studio floor. The resulting paintings hint at a personal narrative and the need to catalogue the objects of everyday life.
Kakyoung Lee’s moving images and video installations are focused on the overlapped—and accumulated—layered lines of non-historical daily images. Starting from video footage captured from her daily surroundings, she deconstructs and reconstructs hundreds of sequences in a fresh structure, utilizing a time intensive process of hundreds of hand drawings to create reanimated interpretations of these events.
Casey Lin’s biomorphic ceramic sculptures are inspired by active organisms such as coral, parasites, fungi, and bacteria that seem to be simultaneously alive and broken down. Emphasizing the cyclical nature of growth and decay, she draws inspiration from the liveliness in clay that parallels a natural process of transformation and reuse.
Janice McDonnell’s paintings are about finding beauty in undesirable places. She paints traditional landscapes—both en plein air and from sketches in the studio—of the Brooklyn industrial waterfront and its surrounding commercial environments, adding an urban sensibility to the historical genre of landscape painting.
Spencer Merolla views materials as repositories of memory which both retain and transmit meaning. Coal Comforts is a concept bakery in which traditional baked goods are replaced with inedible versions made from coal ash. The ash holds a symbolic meaning suggestive of personal mortality (ashes to ashes, cremation, etc.) while the familiar and enticing forms of the baked goods speak to the temptations—and consequences—of overindulgence.
AV Ryan uses familiar elements from Western Art and the everyday to create abstract sculptures that tell a new story about materials. Her works are cast in lightweight materials including joint compound, paper and gesso which she then reworks to bring a luminous and tactile quality to their surfaces.
Traci Talasco uses elements of architecture as a social/political space in her sculptures and installations. Balance and imbalance are repeating concepts in her work that translate in a number of ways from gender inequality, to financial imbalance, and day-to-day struggles. Employing a variety of home construction materials and decorative elements, she exploits commonly held associations with these everyday materials to further build on with her own narratives.
Alexa Williams’ wall-hanging sculpture references a sense of place and the tension between
control and happenstance. Her use of industrial materials—including cement, construction chalk, spray paint, and graphite—reflects her New York surroundings and responds to and confronts the apparent rigidity of materials.
Curated by Peter Gynd
Opening Reception: Saturday, October 21, 2017, 6–8pm
Material Process is a multimedia exhibition of artworks by eleven artists working at TI Art Studios in Gowanus/Redhook Brooklyn. The artists in this exhibition—Jacob Faber, Judy Hugentobler, Sara Jones, Katherine Keltner, Kakyoung Lee, Casey Lin, Janice McDonnell, Spencer Merolla, AV Ryan, Traci Talasco, and Alexa Williams—present a variety of works ranging in use of materials from en plein air oil painting, to found object constructions, ceramic sculpture, and video installation.
The exhibition speaks to how materials and process hold influence on an artistic practice and
the ways in which each artist dictates their own aesthetic and conceptual sensibilities through their media. Organized in conjunction with the annual Gowanus Open Studios, the reception for Material Process will coincide with the opening of artists workspaces to the public throughout the weekend of October 21-22.
About the artists in the exhibition:
Jacob Faber works with found wood and objects to create sculptures that suggest, or invite an interaction. The materials in his works are used in the condition which they were found in order to preserve the detailed impressed left upon them from their previous life. These details, along with their new sculptural forms, build narratives on the history and lifespan of an object beyond its original and intended use.
Judith Hugentobler’s ceramic works are inspired by landscape and the naturalistic textures found in them. She works with slab building techniques which allow her to enhance and articulate surface irregularities as the clay hardens, giving her vessels an organic sensibility within a cultivated form.
Sara Jones works with textiles, fabrics and threads in her paintings which examine the fluid borders between our memory and the spaces we inhabit. The formal repetition of the grid in her work is a literal reference to weaving, yet also metaphorically references a screen, or scrim: something that allows some things to flow through, but prevents others from entering or crossing the boundary.
Katherine Keltner explores order and randomness in her works and how images both construct and destruct a sense of identity. Her paintings are created using light washes of paint to capture a trace of objects from her immediate surroundings like scraps of paper, old drawings, and remnants from the studio floor. The resulting paintings hint at a personal narrative and the need to catalogue the objects of everyday life.
Kakyoung Lee’s moving images and video installations are focused on the overlapped—and accumulated—layered lines of non-historical daily images. Starting from video footage captured from her daily surroundings, she deconstructs and reconstructs hundreds of sequences in a fresh structure, utilizing a time intensive process of hundreds of hand drawings to create reanimated interpretations of these events.
Casey Lin’s biomorphic ceramic sculptures are inspired by active organisms such as coral, parasites, fungi, and bacteria that seem to be simultaneously alive and broken down. Emphasizing the cyclical nature of growth and decay, she draws inspiration from the liveliness in clay that parallels a natural process of transformation and reuse.
Janice McDonnell’s paintings are about finding beauty in undesirable places. She paints traditional landscapes—both en plein air and from sketches in the studio—of the Brooklyn industrial waterfront and its surrounding commercial environments, adding an urban sensibility to the historical genre of landscape painting.
Spencer Merolla views materials as repositories of memory which both retain and transmit meaning. Coal Comforts is a concept bakery in which traditional baked goods are replaced with inedible versions made from coal ash. The ash holds a symbolic meaning suggestive of personal mortality (ashes to ashes, cremation, etc.) while the familiar and enticing forms of the baked goods speak to the temptations—and consequences—of overindulgence.
AV Ryan uses familiar elements from Western Art and the everyday to create abstract sculptures that tell a new story about materials. Her works are cast in lightweight materials including joint compound, paper and gesso which she then reworks to bring a luminous and tactile quality to their surfaces.
Traci Talasco uses elements of architecture as a social/political space in her sculptures and installations. Balance and imbalance are repeating concepts in her work that translate in a number of ways from gender inequality, to financial imbalance, and day-to-day struggles. Employing a variety of home construction materials and decorative elements, she exploits commonly held associations with these everyday materials to further build on with her own narratives.
Alexa Williams’ wall-hanging sculpture references a sense of place and the tension between
control and happenstance. Her use of industrial materials—including cement, construction chalk, spray paint, and graphite—reflects her New York surroundings and responds to and confronts the apparent rigidity of materials.