Thursday, May 31, 2012

The Mystery Project



Object, by Laura Brent. Wood cup lined with velvet on typewritten card. 2012
I just completed another Art House Co-op project, (My seventh! I love these guys, so inspiring!) called The Mystery Project, where I created an artwork to be left in a public space to be found by a stranger.  Again, this was an inspiring project and really got me thinking on my art making, the objects I create (or not, as the case may be, as a conceptualist), and my audience.

I was sent a kit with supplies to guide me in my creation. Included was a 'theme' and a free Canary Yellow Prismacolor fine art marker. My theme, "Things and the people and places using them" was fairly wide open, and became my main inspiration, as I am often thinking on objects in relation to my art making and how one assigns meaning and value to objects. The marker, with two differently sized, flexible tips, while nice and bold, was fairly uninspiring. The color did not 'pop' for me, and drawing is more of a private activity for me, one that I use in working out my ideas, but that is not my finest skill, and not the primary material presented in my artwork.


Thinking conceptually, I considered what would be considered a pinnacle object in our contemporary society. A cell phone or computer? Which object carries with it the most significance? Did I want to choose some obscure object, or something common to all? I continually kept coming back to Meret Oppenheimer and her Object, having seen it in person at the MoMA.

Object, Meret Oppenheim, 1936
Here was a common object, a cup, altered in such a way as to make it unusable, offering a commentary on how we perceive objects we use and come in contact with every day. By adding the foreign materials, the useful object become useless, converted to art, a surreal object with a higher purpose.

This was what I wanted to create. The cup signifies a communal meeting, an object used to nourish our bodies, and something common at social gatherings.  Using found materials, I altered a wooden cup, lining it with red velvet, and it became something else, a unique special object - art.

I felt badly not following the rules designated for the project, but it was also stated that the work  could take any form, so I went ahead with it.  Expecting the work to be generally misunderstood, (see the previous posts regarding my audience...) I decided to leave it in one of Fort Collins' best coffee house/book stores, The Bean Cycle/Matter Books, hoping that the person who encountered it there would have a basic knowledge of contemporary art, or at least a curiosity to explore. (i.e. book lovers.) The colorful title of the book pictured nearby was the impetus for my final choice of location.

My Mystery Project, installed in its location, near the art & photography books.

The work's reception is a mystery to me. I will never know who sees it, who takes it home as their own, and how it is perceived. But this is part of the adventure of art making, putting one's work out in the world, it is no longer mine, and the public can do with it what they may. It was not easy to leave, as I was quickly becoming attached to it, as I enjoyed its tactile beauty. But, I slyly set it upon the shelf, pretending to look at books, unnoticed by the few folks working nearby on their computers.  Perhaps it may still be there when I return one day. If not, I hope it finds a place where it is appreciated and enjoyed, as I did its creation.
Another view of the work.

Detail of typewritten card.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Duchamp, nothing and an already made artwork

Every summer, I take time off from the gallery life, and take a sabatical from the exhibitions at Valhall Arts.  Instead, I leave behind something for my visitors to see.  Something that is nothing.

Last summer it was an installed hole in the ground, dug in the middle of the gallery, an obvious falsity, (and Andy Goldsworthy reference)


I presented it as a joke, but also a truth.  The title, The Artist is not Present, was a direct reference to Marina Abramovic's performance (that I went to see) at the MoMA, and the shovel left in the space as a nod to Marcel Duchamp (specifically his "In Advance of the Broken arm"). The multiple choice question didactic was a way to playfully engage the audience, while dropping clues to some of my favorite popular cultural ephemera, as well as a statement of my feelings toward the reception of my artwork by my local audience. It's a construction of an environment, one that the audience was excluded from (only able to look through the window in the closed and locked door), using common objects, symbols, and cliched ideas.

This year I have installed something along this vein, however at the this point in my work, I have reached a state of utter disregard for my local audience. I feel like after the 4 years that Valhall Arts has been open, I have taken them as far as they are willing to go in regards to viewing and thinking about contemporary art. Their responses are baffling and frustrating, and mind blowing in their ineptitude. I am instead focusing on my ideas, my work, and marketing it to a broader audience, beyond my neighborhood, hopefully for viewers who care to take the time to understand it. This situation could be considered a brief re-enactment, an homage of sorts, to Duchamp and his behavior at the end of his career when he stated that he was no longer going to make any more art, and instead, just play chess. (Image below is Duchamp's window display for Andre Breton's  Arcane 17 at the Gotham Book Mart, 1945)


Time would reveal that this was a sort of performance art in itself, as Duchamp was busy for many years creating his final grand artistic gesture. (The creation of Etant donnes -- link via ToutFait.com, is to an animation by Robert Slawinski, and involves the five following unaltered works by Duchamp in the order in which they are listed below:

Window Display for Andre Breton's Le Surrealisme et la Peinture, 1945
Given: Maria, the Waterfall, and the Illuminating Gas, 1947
Study for Given: 1. The Waterfall / 2. The Illuminating Gas, 1947
The Illuminating Gas and the Waterfall, 1948-49
Given: 1. The Waterfall / 2. The Illuminating Gas, 1946-1966)

I want to leave my audience to wonder where I've gone, as I go out into the world to enjoy all it has to offer. I leave them only a tiny clue, easily overlooked, a QR code to scan, itself a bizarre object unique to our contemporary digital culture. I wave a fond farewell, as I bid them  to "piss off!".  To those curious few who make the effort (and have the smart phone ability) to scan the code, a surprise. See what it will bring? Yep, "Nothing Here."


Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Giving it all away!


My new installation is a very subtle and complex work of art. Many who visited the opening were confused and did not understand the meanings in the work. It was very common for people to rush in and out, only spending a short time looking at the installation. There was often a lack of serious consideration given to the artwork, rarely was any time taken to just experience the environment, taking in the entire installation, absorbing the myriad of sensory stimuli in the space. I was often asked, “What’s it about?” as the visitor just wanted the quick answer, for me to simply tell them my ideas. To do that would defeat the making of the art, the delivery of my ideas through beautiful environments. When I create an installation, I compose the entire environment, directing the visitor’s experience, so it is somewhat disrespectful when a visitor does not take the time to actually look at what I’ve done. Why are you here? I do not understand this mentality, this lack of attention. I assume these are folks out on the First Friday Art Walk, so they must be interested in art. They may just be unfamiliar with, or unaware of, how to look at art. It appears that there is a lack of motivation to investigate, to explore, engage and enjoy strange or confusing artworks. Where is the creative curiosity? Perhaps a person’s ego is bruised by this confusion, experiencing a feeling of stupidity because they do not understand, and this puts them off. But, do not make the mistake of confusing the subtlety of the work as some high brow, over intellectualized “art-speak”.  My ideas behind the work are persistent human emotions, issues and conditions common to all, and if the viewer would only take the time to experience the work, in its entirety, they would arrive at the answers themselves. Any work of art, will, of course, always be an individual experience, so my ideas are not necessarily the ones the viewer will arrive at, but once an installation is truly experienced, the messages and emotions and thoughts created in the viewer become valid as well. Being in the west, in the lesser populated heartland of our country, there is a bit of a disconnect with the rest of the contemporary art scene found in major cities (NYC, LA, Chicago), so the reactions of my public does not surprise me. It is confounding though. (I will digress here no further, for more discussions see other &/ future posts.) So, to aid in the reception of my work, I will explain it, in an attempt to educate my audience, and perhaps, some will be intrigued enough to want to see it (again).

Moving Pictures, Take Two
Meditations, 2012

 The space is small, sparsely furnished, with minimalistic objects and sensory stimuli. There is an intimate feel of an alter space, with the dramatic black curtains on each side of a white cloth panel in which the short film is playing in a loop. The white cloth cascades out into the small room in a wrinkled watery stroke. A small battery operated candle flickers artificially in the middle of this ‘stream of cloth’. The edges are defined with two white ‘columns’, haphazardly leaning against the walls. Opposite the video is a sterling silver necklace with a baby shoe charm, and upon further inspection, it is revealed to contain the artist’s blood. This small object is lit with a spotlight to accentuate its importance in the installation, its placement opposite the video purposefully used to contrast the ready made object with the created object. There is also a small table with a simple tin tray with bread and small cups filled with wine. There is a small didactic, similar in size to a prayer book, listing the installation materials*, and stating to “please use reverence” if one is going to imbibe in the proffered bread and wine as a sacred sacrament. This is the single sign directing the visitor to the importance of their interaction with the work, or not, as the case may be, and to be aware of the reasons behind their choice.



The short film is a digital collage made with an iPhone camera, using an 8mm film application, and has a vintage feel, being black and white, dust scattered through out and a jumpy, frame skipping look. This artificial aged feel is purposeful, used to instill a sense of nostalgia in the work, a timelessness, and something coming from long ago, giving the work the appearance of traveling through time, yet actually being a false indicator, made as is was with a modern device.  The 3 minute film begins with a blank shot, a rhythmic beating of shadows against a white background, really bringing again, the artificial aging, and digital creation, with its ‘dust’ and ‘projector’ noise to the viewers attention. The image is what one might see upon waking in the room, opening the eyes, beginning the day, the bare ceiling filling the entire frame, with only a bit of the wall grounding the imagery like a landscape. The next scene is a quiet shot of a stark and empty table and chair, cast with a dramatic black shadow, cutting the round table not quite in half. This could feel like a lonely time, but my intention was one more of reflection, and meditation (thus the name, Meditation 2012, part of the Moving Pictures series). The round lines in the chair and table contrast with the sharp straight line created by the shadow on the table. There is an interrupting triangle of another shadow, just breaking the edge of the frame, with other straight shapes distracting the viewer. The stillness and length of the shot, the slight, slow movement in a circle, all are commentaries on the quietness of the moment, perhaps a morning ritual, or a time ‘at the table’, a place for sustenance.  The last shot of this scene is one from a distance, and we see the doorway, and the intersection lines forming a cross in the reflections on the French door. The doorknob a round point in the frame, moving slowly in and out to draw the viewer’s attentions, foreshadowing what’s to come.

Midway through the film the scene cuts to a shot looking out the window, now the dominant shape is the square, the strong white lines creating multiple crosses, the ‘outside’ is introduced, as the view looks out the window. There is a very subtle, slow drawing in and out, almost peering out, but then drawing away, moving forward and back, like a breath; it is a preparation of sorts, a conscious change of thought from the previous scene at the table, one of the ‘self’, and now is shifting to thoughts of the ‘other’. This is continued in the next scene shift, taking the viewer on a slow progressive journey from inside the home, out into the community. However, there is a reluctance, a hesitancy, even as the pace of the film begins to pick up. The scene is that of a closed door, with its fairly uninviting feel, shot from the distance as it is, and the noise taking on a low volume roar of space. The stagnation is broken in the last 30 seconds of the film by a dramatically different scene with movement, as the viewer is ‘walked’ out of the courtyard. We see again the windows, but from the outside now, and only in passing glances. The strong white lines of the columns as they pass by are symbolic of the daily duties, and responsibilities of daily life, the scene ending with a pan to the sky, a symbolic ‘going out into the world', and finally the film culminates in a final still view of the portico of a church, linear columns holding up gently curved archways, and a reverent statue of St. Francis barely discernible in the shadows, signifying an arrival, a finding of ones place, a relaxing celebration with the first obvious sounds heard, those of birds, and with it, a peaceful feeling of freedom finally arriving, as the film washes out.


The overtly religious symbols I use in the film are there to direct the viewer to spirituality, but it need not be necessarily Christian; it can be any sort of spiritualism. The work was opened on Good Friday, probably the holiest day in the Christian faith. I reference the Christian story of God’s giving of the Son with the repeated use of  the iconic visual symbols, the cross, and communion cups, accentuating the sacrifices that were made for the sins of humankind, and the forgiveness that is given through God’s gesture. The ritualistic re-enactment through communion, is highlighted with the objects associated with that ritual, also offered as sustenance and refreshment, and an offering to the visitor. The white cloth on the floor is a symbolic of the parturition, and Mary's sacrifices she was required to make. I wanted to spotlight the sacrifices we all make, and as a symbolic gesture of my own, drew my own blood for the work. Another message in the work is also one of forgiveness, something everyone needs, even giving grace to ones self. We are all lost children, who suffer through our own sins and mistakes. We all sacrifice ourselves as adults for our own children, or others, spilling our own blood. These things I touch on through the purposeful use of the particular objects in the space. I also point out that this is not a holy space, though the obvious artificiality of some of the objects. The fake old style modern technology used to make the film, the candle not being a real candle and the columns not really there, all remind the viewer that it is a work of art and not a sacred place, as it can be anywhere. It is offered as an opportunity to be used as a spiritual space, but more importantly I want the viewer to take away enlightenment within themselves, about sacrifice, forgiveness, and finally acceptance and peace.

*Installation Materials:
3 minute 7 second looped black and white video
Black and white cloths
White columns
Bread and wine offering
Silver necklace with baby shoe charm
Candle
The artist's blood

Thursday, March 1, 2012

ArtHouse Sketchbook Project Process, Part 3

This is the third post in a three part series explaining my processes in creating my sketchbook for the Art House Co-Op, in Brooklyn, NY. (Sketchbook Project 2012)


Here is how I re-bound my sketchbook:

First, I started by punching hole in every leaf, and arranged the pages in four groups of four pages each, with a fifth group being made up of the single photograph. I arranged them, and cut the edges even, the corners rounded.


Due to the thickness of my five sections, I decided to make three holes in the cover, planning to use the outer two holes twice and the center one once. I did not want to make 5 separate holes, because I did not want the book to be too thick.


Before sewing, I waxed the binding thread by pulling it through a block of bees' wax. I left plenty of extra thread to tie my knots, and began at the front top outer hole, and wove back and forth through the punched holes in the section and the cover, then back up adding the second section. Once at the top again, I pulled everything tight and tied a knot to secure it.







I continued on, adding the sections one by one, sewing up and down, in and out of my punched holes, until all were tightly in place.




I finished by tying a a secure knot




I added a strip of book binding tape to cover the outside threads, being sure to leave the bar code visible, and voila! It was finished.

Seeing it in its completed state was quite a rush of emotions. I was excited and proud at the results, happy even with the failures as it was a testament to the adventurous process I had undertaken. I hastily took some quick snaps of the project, just in case it was lost in the mail, and packed it up and shipped it off to the Art House Co-op. I plan to visit it sometime on the tour this year, or at its permanent home at the Brooklyn Art Library.

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

ArtHouse Sketchbook Project Process, Part 2

After much thought and trepidation, I finally began...


I started by unbinding the book, the two small staples tossed into the trash with a freeing gesture of joy at finally getting started, the loose eight pages suddenly feel less intimidating, and I am excited for their journey toward their final completed identities.


I planned to used a liquid photo-emulsion to print photographs directly onto the page, and much thought was spent addressing the layout of the book. I needed to establish where the photographs would be, where the emulsion would need to be placed, which pages were reserved for drawings, etc. The liquid emulsion I used was called "Ag-Plus High Speed Emulsion", and heating was required to liquify it before painting. I set up the painting station in my dark room, with a hot water bath for the emulsion, and progressed to apply the emulsion onto several pages from the sketchbook. The painted pages were left to dry in the dark, and once several layers of the emulsion were applied, the prepped pages were stored in a light tight bag, or loaded into a pinhole camera to await exposure.


The pinhole process was less than satisfactory. I always say, if one feels like a pro', "hot-shot" photographer, just shoot some pinholes to restore one's humility; the process is unpredictable, and results are often unexpected. My issue with the process was that the combination of the pinhole camera making a soft focused image with the soft print quality of the liquid emulsion, created images that were just too blurry to be distinguishable.


I also had issues with the chemistry of the emulsion, getting strange results due to the way the emulsion was pulled between the two leafs. I needed to repeat my processes many times, using a heavier weight paper, and painting the emulsion and exposing the two pages together, yet drying and processing the two pages separately.

Shooting photographs with the theme in mind, (Long Road Trips and Short Phone Calls) I also made prints using the traditional enlarger. Having discovered some vintage negatives, I included images of my paternal grandmother. This image was one of the first successes with the medium.


I continued prepping pages, and shooting photographs, and experimenting with the photo-emulsion and all the ways I could make marks. I used a camera-less procedure, creating photograms with the film and other objects. I was painting and drawing with more traditional mediums when not using the photographic modes, and always thinking of alternative ideas for the project. I would draw over processed photographic images, cutting, and collaging the pages and images together, weaving a visual tapestry.



Eventually, I amassed a pile of completed pages, some successes, some failures, but together they were layered and interwoven with the various techniques I'd used. The messy group felt very disheveled and unorganized, and I was unsure of my feelings about what I'd created, but I was committed to finishing the project. (After meeting Shane, from Art House, in Denver at the Million Little Pictures; Photo-Mobile exhibition, I was shocked to learn that the majority of entries are never returned!!??)



I had four sections, or gatherings, of the individual pages, each containing four leafs. I included one extra section made up of only one photograph, a pinhole image printed on resin coated photo paper. The strange quality of this middle page, seemed to bring the chaos of the other pages together, and being an actual photograph, it is a signature of sorts, a nod to the camera, the machine, I use in my art making. In the end, I included many of the 'failures', as a testament to my process, and really, a sketchbook is a place to experiment, and I wanted to show all the images I had created.

The following post will explain the binding process.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Sketchbook Project with Art House Co-op

When I first received my official book for the Sketchbook Project 2012, an Art House Co-op inspiring project, I was surprised at how small it was, it is just a small 5x7" Scout book, with only 8 leafs or 32 pages. I was also amazed at how large the project was, an inspiring international project with tens of thousands of other artists participating. How could my measly drawings ever stand up to those pressures? The immensity of the project was intimidating, and I spent a long time meditating on how to create my book, what parts of my art making practice to include, and what ideas I wanted to portray. I wanted to make it unique, find a way to stand out in the Brooklyn Library, the permanent home of the collection, (when it was not out on its national tour). I was lacking confidence in my drawing abilities and wondering if signing up had been a mistake. But, a sketchbook is a place an artist explores ideas, a sanctuary, where one can 'mess up' without any real consequences, (beyond lacking beauty). Most artist's sketchbooks are private visions into the inner workings of the artist, something held close to the chest, and rarely, if ever shown to anyone. This project threw those notions all away, it was a glorious adventure, and a great way to expose these private bits to the public, an offering of sorts, a gift to the audience; the mind, materials and praxis of the artist, all laid bare for their enjoyment. This project engages the audience in new and profound ways, offering insight into art making, and a better overall understanding of the art world.

My process was long, and involved many experimental techniques, with new media. As a photographer, it was important to me to bring the camera into the project. To integrate the photograph with the act of sketching. I used liquid photo emulsions, and the capturing of light as a form of mark making, as well as more traditional drawing or painting. I have put this, and the following posts, together to document my process, to share my adventures (or mis-adventures) encountered along the making of my sketchbook.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Last Chance to see "Blurry Pictures"


Image credit:
Laura Brent, Doors.
Silver gelatin double pinhole photograph, Santa Fe NM, 2011.
Positive contact print.

Due to the snowy weather on February 3rd, the closing reception of the pinhole photography exhibition Blurry Pictures was cancelled. Due to this event, I have extended the show for a few more weeks. Call or email me to schedule a time to view the exhibit. laura@valhallarts.com