Cheap & Plastique Magazine

Page 1

Contemporary ART

issue #10

w w w.cheapandplastique.com




Contemporary ART

creator/curator/designer: Violet Shuraka

THANKS TO: artists: Deedee Cheriel Dianna Frid Geert Goiris Christian Hellmich Laura Oldfield Park Amy Park Georg Parthen Aaron Williams writers: Andrew Shea Violet Shuraka Nathan Wasserbauer COPYediting: Holly Monahan A special thanks to Tonya Douraghy and Marc Rabinowitz for designing Cheap & Plastique’s 10th issue, special edition posters. And to Zoran Pungercar for creating an illustration for the limited edition C & P tote bag.

Visit the cheap & plastique blog: cheapandplastique.wordpress.com Or to peruse old issues please see: www.cheapandplastique.com And for more info or to send goodies please contact violet shuraka at: plastiqueinc@yahoo.com

Front cover image by Christian Hellmich Still, Oil on canvas, 150 x 95 cm, 2011 Vellum overlay image by Laura Oldfield Park

issue #10

A Few Words From The Editor

Dear Friends and Fellow Art Enthusiasts, Happy 10th issue everyone! We are happy to report that this year Cheap & Plastique has produced a total of three new issues, thus exceeding former production quotas by nearly 200% and raising the grand total of Cheap & Plastique-quality printed missives to ten, a number that even ten-year olds know warrants celebration! Hurrah! Issue 10 will be released at C & P’s fourth Fountain Art Fair (our second in New York) this March. Running concurrent with the spring Armory Show, the Fountain exhibit highlights the eccentric and the avant-garde, with which rumors abound that we here at C & P may have some experience. Cheap & Plastique will be exhibiting an international roster of artists including Elias Necol Melad, Heather Morgan, Christine Navin, Georg Parthen, Rachel Reupke, Charles Roberts III, Nathan Wasserbauer, Peter Wildanger, & Rivkah Young, many of whom we are thrilled to be working with again. In Issue 10 we feature artists who hail from Germany, England, Belgium, and the U.S.A., whose work we feel is outstanding and we hope will provide us with the sparks to finally take this thing international! Thank you for your continued support of the arts, Cheap & Plastique, and all things fancy! Cheers, Cheap & Plastique


contents

5 Drawing/Publishing/Silkscreen Laura Oldfield Park

13 Photography Geert Goiris

21 Painting Christian Hellmich

27 Photography Georg Parthen

35 Illustration/Painting Deedee Cheriel

39 Painting Amy Park

45 Mixed Media Dianna Frid

51 Mixed Media Aaron Williams


Georg Parthen

Rivkah Young

Rachel Reupke


Peter Wildanger

Cheap & Plastique is representing: Elias Necol Melad Heather Morgan Christine Navin Georg Parthen Rachel Reupke Charles Roberts III Nathan Wasserbauer Peter Wildanger Rivkah Young at the Fountain Art Fair Heather Morgan


ART Q and A with Violet Shuraka


In your artistic practice do you focus mainly on drawing and collage? What other materials find their way into your work? I trained as a painter, I am currently working on series of large scale canvases about abandoned housing estates and militant cells operating from them. I am also collaborating with other artists on film and writing projects. I don’t really compartmentalise my practice , it doesn’t make any sense for me to do that. The paintings, the billboards, the blog posts, they are all manifestations of the same force. They have different intensities and speeds and that’s why I move between different processes but I don’t privilege one over another. Sometimes there is a wash of color overlaying your drawings (often a bright pink or fluorescent green mainly used for

overwritten text or graffiti). What effect to you hope to achieve by adding these day-glo colors and text over your stark grey subject matter (depictions of a post-industrial landscape; crumbling tower blocks, deserted trash strewn streets, overgrown nonplaces)? I use flashes of fluorescent colour in an attempt to articulate those fleeting moments of epiphany, those little rushes of euphoria that you encounter when you’re drifting in the city. I suppose it is the city filtered through a narcotic lens, those heightened moments, flashbacks from raves and punk gigs, all day drinking sessions in squatted pubs. The translucent layers of paint also allude to the textures and surfaces of the architecture I’m walking through, the way concrete is weathered, marked by its inhabitants, the

Laura oldfield park


patina of decay and the possibility of rupture. By building up layers with the paint I am also attempting to describe the city as palimpsest, of layers of writing, erasure, and overwriting. Your work is very much about the state of affairs in London at the present time. Can you imagine making work about another place? Have you lived outside of London/the U.K.? I am indelibly marked by London as it the city I have spent most time in but I also feel how it relates to other cities and explore these paths. I am about to embark on a six week residency in China and also Korea later in the year. I am interested in exile, in landscape as a mythologized, intense mental space. I lived in New York for a while, I had a studio in Hell’s Kitchen, which was a massively contested site at the time. Do you feel that the London/Tottenham riots of August 2011 are just the beginning of a time of unrest in the city? Did the riots bring

about any policy change? Or are things pretty much the same as they were before these events occurred? I think those moments of incandescent rage were the signal of better times. Those currents of anger have always been there pulsating beneath the surface of the city, oscillating above it and through it like mobile phone signals. I was impatient for those channels to be activated and in August they were. I think this year we will see more intensive periods of fighting. I can visualize the flashpoints now, all we need is a couple of prolonged heat waves in June and July. You relate your walks/drifts to Guy Debord and the S.I.’s idea of the dérive. Do you feel that people have become so pacified by the predictable and monotonous experiences of everyday life that they are not really living anymore? (I really think that people should turn off their televisions and computers and

get out and experience the real world much more frequently!) I think less pacified, more exhausted. I genuinely believe the social terrain can shift very quickly. A few years ago when I started my zine, in 2005, my work was considered by some to be exotic, to be an amusing anomaly, massive social upheaval, strikes and economic crisis were deemed to belong to another era. I knew it would all happen again, I was willing it to happen, I knew people weren’t pacified to that extent, I knew it was all close to breaking. Now a lot of those same people find my work a lot less amusing since it has shifted into the terrain of documentary and reportage of the contemporary moment. A lot can happen when you’ve got so many people on the dole in a city seething with viciousness. In the introduction to my book Savage Messiah, Mark Fisher talks about this, that if all our time is taken up trying to pay rent and mortgages it


leaves us too wrecked to wander and drift and think, As Jon Savage points out in England’s Dreaming, ‘the London of punk was still a bombed-out city, full of chasms, caverns, spaces that could be temporarily occupied and squatted. Once those spaces are enclosed, practically all of the city’s energy is put into paying the mortgage or the rent. There’s no time to experiment, to journey without already knowing where you will end up. Your aims and objectives have to be stated up front. “Free time” becomes convalescence. You turn to what reassures you, what will most refresh you for the working day: the old familiar tunes (or what sound like them) on ITunes. London becomes a city of pinched-face drones plugged into iPods.’ When I moved to Bethnal Green (from Boston, Massachusetts) in 1999 my interest was immediately piqued by the council estates sprinkled throughout the East End / Tower Hamlets area. I had never seen such architecture in Boston, or in the US, for that

matter. I was drawn to these massive housing projects, intrigued by their coldness and also slightly frightened by the sprawling nature of the structures and the strange empty areas surrounding them. I would wander around the back streets of the East End daily, photographing and exploring all of the dilapidated sites. You also photograph while walking/drifting around certain parts of London and base your drawings on the images you collect from your wanders. What draws you to these neglected (and now changing) parts of the city? Do you aim to document the disappearance of these types of areas in the city? Brutalist architecture has always fascinated me. I have always been enthralled by the dark theatricality of it, the levels and walkways, the networks of courtyards. I am enraptured by the moment when the modernist grid starts to unravel and succumbs to the labyrinth, those moments when planned uses of spaces are subverted, like when it kicked off

on Broadwater Farm (in Tottenham) in 1985 where the aerial walkways were used for observation and aerial bombardment, and also the Crescents in Hulme in Manchester that were squatted and surrounded by the nomadic architectures of traveler sites. When I was in the East End last summer I was shocked at how different Bethnal Green looked, one of the council estates that I walked by every day seemed like it was slated for demolition. My friend told me this was because of the Olympics coming to London in 2012. You address this redevelopment in your work. How do you see the East End changing in the future? Will the East End just be another area for the yuppies to sip fancy cocktails in their new luxury condos, displacing the artists and the poor people that have called that area their home for so long? When I started the zine this was one of the biggest concerns to me, the class cleansing that was happening around the East End. I



was directly affected by it when my own estate was evicted. Certain areas have had whole sections of the population forcibly ousted, parts of Dalston, Hackney and Bethnal Green have become massively gentrified and a lot of people have been forcibly ‘decanted’ to sink estates in places like Poplar and Edmonton. The scene you describe has already materialized. I am interested to see what the East End will look like in 2013 when we’re steeped in the second wave of a double dip recession, the collapse of the Eurozone, the backlash against the failed Olympics. A lot of people who bought into the idea of property investment and aspirational lifestyles are going to be defaulting on mortgages in hugely contested areas, these boroughs are riven by strife along multiple lines. I read online that you once lived in Aylesbury Estate in Elephant and Castle, which is also under redevelopment at the current time, what was the experience of living there like? Were you squatting there or living in a legitimate space?

I was staying there for a year or so in someone else’s council flat. It was pretty grim then, (ten years ago) there wasn’t much happening around there unless you were into BNP pubs and African churches. Now it’s better because there has been a massive influx of Equadorians and Colombians and they have better bars and cafes. I used to spend a lot of time walking from there to the bawdy drinking dens of Peckham and New Cross, that route across Burgess Park, along the ghost of the Surrey canal became suffused with a sense of excitement, the euphoria of escape from stifling misery, when I walk it now I still feel it. In addition to making drawings you also produce a zine, Savage Messiah, and artwork for outdoor billboards (both which showcase your drawings). When you hang the billboard pieces throughout the city are you doing this illegally? Do you hang your work over paid adverts or do you choose disused billboards? Do you include any sort of tag on the work or is it anonymous (except to those that

recognize your artwork)? Have you ever been in trouble for vandalizing? I like the immediacy of going out flyposting, it’s the best way of responding to shifting situations. With the more organized commissioned posters you have a certain luxury in the sense that the work is durational, it exists in the street for a certain amount of time. This means you can burrow into a place over time, be more subversive in the content, with the flyposters I like to be quite brutal and direct. Could you tell me a bit about the WE ARE BAD collective? What role do you play in the organization of this group’s activities? We are Bad doesn’t exist in that exact incarnation although the other members of the cell are still active and we do work together occasionally for certain projects. I do a radio show called Abject Bloc with them. I like working as a collective. I am currently collaborating with other people now on projects around the Diamond Jubilee, Olympics, and 2012 riots.



Tell me about your zine, Savage Messiah. How long have you been producing the zine and how many issues have you made? Do you produce and finance the zine yourself or do you receive artist grants to help you with production costs, etc...? How long have you had the Savage Messiah blog online? Is it a direct translation of what appears in the zine? Savage Messiah started in 2005, I have made 13 issues so far. I have always made it on a very ad hoc basis, just photocopying them and distributing to whoever is close at hand. I like the fluidity and dynamism of zines, I thought of it as a current, operating outside the designated white cube zones. I thought of it as sending out a message in a bottle, that it would drift out on its own and who knows who might find it and how they might relate to it. I always trusted it would be an effective way of contributing to a critical milieu and allowing the right people to gravitate towards me. Now it is a book it has become something else, it operates on a totally different level. The blog

has been going for a year, when it started I was posting fragments from the zine, writing, photos and drawings, now I post new writing, reports from recent dérives. Have you always kept a written record of your thoughts about the situations you experience in daily life while living in London? Are the texts in the zine culled from personal experience, other people’s experiences, or a mix of both? I write a journal, I usually spend an hour a day on it, sometimes more. This is important, it becomes the genesis of other trajectories,, I always draw on memories of walks around the city. It’s not so much about a quest for authenticity in the work, that doesn’t really interest me, it’s more about having lacerating detail in the writing and a connection to those desires and anxieties that end up being hidden. I also write up my dérives, these become fractured narratives, a conflation of detailed recollections and conjecture, the walk becomes a structure to weave desires and fictions.

What projects are you working on currently? In April 2012 I have a residency in Shenzhen in China where I am making work for a sculpture Biennial. When I return to London I am doing a residency in Deptford, South London where I will be using a disused police station as a HQ for various activities. In September I am making work in Korea for the Gwangju Biennial, then in November I am in a show at Caja Madrid in Barcelona called Desire Paths with Francis Alys, Mark Ariel Waller, and Cyprien Galliard. I am making an intervention at Tate Britain in August, this will involve walking around Vauxhall and Pimlico and photocopying drift reports and flyposters.


ART Q and A with Violet Shuraka

E 313, 1999

Geert Goiris


Abyss, 2000

Where do you currently live? Is this where you grew up? I live in Antwerpen, Belgium. But I grew up in Bornem which is a small town about 35 Km. west of Antwerp. What do you like most about living in Antwerp? Is there a large contemporary art/photography scene there? My girlfriend and I came to Antwerpen after living for two years in Prague and two years in Copenhagen. We moved to Antwerpen when I was accepted at the HISK (Higher Institute for Fine arts). HISK is a studio-program for artists, with technical facilities and an international team of visiting tutors. The residency lasted for three years and was set in a fantastic place: an abandoned army base in the city. After HISK we stayed on and settled in Antwerpen. Antwerpen is a quite lively city for its size. The fashion-academy is respected and draws talented young designers to Antwerpen. Also the music and visual arts scenes are quite vibrant, with a good infrastructure of institutions, some artist collectives and independent spaces as well.

There is a photography museum in Antwerpen, which has a good library on the pioneering years of the medium, up to the 1980s –1990s. Recent and contemporary photography is not very well represented. Unfortunately, the programme of the museum is a bit too populistic and arbitrary to my taste, luckily a few individual photographers are trying to revitalise the institute. Belgium is so small that it is easy to get around to see exhibitions or performances. Brussels is more prominent and cosmopolitan, with a strong contemporary dance scene, the Wiels Centre for Contemporary Art, and concerts and lectures all the time. Also Gent is an interesting place where things happen, and cities like Liege and Oostende have a lot of character and personality. So I don’t want to be too chauvinistic about Antwerpen. What I like about the city is that the rents are relatively cheap, so it is manageable to find a good space to work and live, and geographically it lies well situated between Amsterdam, Paris and London. The living quality here is fine, just a pity that the traffic is so mad, and the air pollution it brings is heavy. The small

size and layout of the centre would make it ideal for biking, but in the postwar period the whole infrastructure was directed to cars. The mentality is changing slowly, but we still have a long way to go. Do you mostly travel outside of Belgium to find subject matter for your photographs? How many trips (for the purpose of your photography practice) do you go on in a year, generally? It depends, about 5 times in a year. I try to combine trips: when I have an exhibition or a workshop abroad, I often stay a little longer to make new work. After a long or faraway journey, it may take a while before I embark on a new project, collecting money and finding free time can be a slow process. I teach at the Art Academy in Brussels, so I travel during the academic breaks or in the summer holiday. Most of my work is shot outside of Belgium. You often shoot desolate, ethereal, sometimes sublime, landscapes in remote areas. Do you consider your experience of traveling to and photographing these remote places similar to an expedition?


Liepaja, 2004

Melting Snow, 2005


Eugene’s Neighborhood, 2002

Not really, I would say that my travels are more an exercise in wandering and improvising. Most expeditions have a defined objective. I don’t always have a clear idea before I set out. Often the context (the characteristics of a landscape, the quality of the light on a specific moment, the spatial impact of architecture, etc…) directs my gaze, and I am responding to it. This method of working is exemplified in the Resonance series. When I made Whiteout, (a projection piece for two analogue middle format projectors and a dissolve controller), I had the privilege to join the Belare (Belgian Antarctic Research Expedition) for two successive seasons. This mission was carried out by a large group composed of engineers, biologists, military mechanics and logistics specialists, a doctor, carpenters, electricians, a few mountain guides, and a bunch of adventurers. Heterogeneous as it was, we all had clear tasks and responsibilities, not in the least because the environment is so hostile. So we were structured as a genuine expedition, a group of individuals with an articulated sense of interdependecy. When the nearest neighbor is so far away, survival strategies and safety regulations become tangible. And for Adieu, the project I am currently working on, the method lies somewhere in between: I carry out a lot of research before I set out to photograph a specific subject.

I travel alone to make the Adieu photographs, but a lot of people are involved because I need to get authorisation for photographing particular places or interiors. The preparation has some resemblance to a small expedition. On the field I often meet people who show me around or open up the building they care for. It is a privilege to have such local “guides.” Is the idea of an expedition important to your photographic practice? To me it represents the romantic embodiment of discovery, self-realization and curiousity, and I am quite sensitive to this kind of mythical fictions. The classical rites of passage during a long journey are separation, initiation, and return. And usually the person that returns has “changed.” Travel is often defined as a freeing and transformative experience. And I can relate to this concept of “inward” travel at the same time it is obvious that many historical expeditions had imperialist or colonial agendas, and the heroic rendering of expeditions in popular culture can be a misleading façade covering the violent realities of these intrusions. Expeditions were always symbols of restlessness and ambition, this applies to an expedition into the heart of darkness, as well as to a journey to the moon. How long do you stay when you travel for a photographic adventure? When you are shooting are you usually alone or do you have a guide with

you? How do you get around in these empty places? Is there ever a fear of being threatened by wild animals when you are in extremely remote regions? Usually, I don’t stay very long, and when it is practically possible, I prefer to be alone or with just one friend. I walk, but not very far. My equipment (large format camera, tripod, film and lenses) is a bit too heavy to take long hikes. So I always end up driving a lot. I like to move around in open spaces such as the tundra, the desert, salt plains, or ice fields. Not many animals live in these unsheltered environments. In Norwegian Lapland I was once attacked by a bird. I must have come too close to its nest, so it was diving straight down towards my head to scare me away (and the bird succeeded). So injury is more likely to come from the land or climate than from animals: dangers like flash floods, rivers becoming unpassable, pitch black moonless nights where one might stumble and fall, or the freezing cold that numbs face and fingers. Respect is important, so I always pay attention to the advice of local people—they know. Many people are afraid of the “big city” and the dangers associated with city living (crime, etc...) I feel the opposite of this, nature (and its disorder) is what terrifies me. Are you ever fearful when you find yourself so far removed from other humans and urban “civilization” and immersed in nature?


Suspension, 2006

Sphinx, 2004

Ecologist’s Place, 2006


I haven’t been totally on my own in very remote areas, so I can’t tell. During the Antarctic expedition, we sailed with a Russian icebreaker from South Africa to Antarctica. From the second day on we were so far away of all usual shipping routes, that it made us very exposed. Sharing this vulnerability with everyone on board made it more bearable. You state, “The romantic notion of exploration, the sensation of seeing something for the first time, not only as an individual, but also as a society, is a big part of my work.” Could you discuss this further... An explorer is always an individual, being confronted with something for the first time. But when returning to civilization and sharing his or her witness account, the new discoveries enter into collective consciousness. Discoveries are made by a small group of people, but eventually they make their way into a larger society. A new discovery can cause a paradigm shift. An example is Pale Blue Dot, the name that was given to the photograph taken by the spacecraft Voyager 1 at its most remote location where commands from earth were still possible to be received. Capturing the earth from this distance placed humanity on a scale that was never seen before. This image isn’t really about a discovery, but was more a realization that came about through visual proof: society seeing something for the first time. How did you first go to Spitsbergen, Norway, in the Arctic? What made you want to shoot a series there specifically? My girlfriend is Norwegian and her sister is a geologist who has lived and researched many years in Spitsbergen, together with her husband. This gave us the chance to go visit them and see this miraculous place. The landscape type on Svalbard is Arctic desert: dry and cold. There is a continuous permafrost, along the coast this frozen layer is 10 – 40 m. deep, but in the highlands it can reach up until 450 metres. An effect of this permafrost is that any trace imprinted in the landscape will remain for a long time. I saw a photograph that was taken in the 1980s of the tire tracks made by a German Luftwaffe plane when it landed on one of the islands during World War II. The tracks were still clearly visible after 40 years. The enduring cold acts as an archiving agent, and every imprint made on the land remains like a scar or scratch. Such metaphors are often used, defining the place as a kind of virgin territory where visitors are interrupting the sovereign wilderness. Confronted with a place that is so foreign and hostile to human settlement, feels almost like trespassing. On top of that, there are few bacteria, so the decomposing process of organic matter is slow. Leaving a simple item behind, such as a cigarette butt, will have a profound effect, as it will remain for a very long time. Every single object added to the landscape becomes pertinent and stands out as an anomaly. The cold also extracts moisture from the air, so the atmospheric perspective drops. This makes it possible to see clear for about 80 Km. or more. Distances are hard to judge, and the outline of mountains and the horizon seem unusually sharp. All these spectacular features make the place

feel like a prehistoric, ancient land that has come to a slow standstill. I felt totally overwhelmed by the landscape, and the anachronistic qualities it possesses has been a returning theme in my artistic work since. Many of your images convey a sense of loneliness and the idea of man lost in a void, your images from the Whiteout series especially come to mind. Could you talk a bit about the experience of photographing the Antarctic locations in this series? How did it feel to be immersed in these vast landscapes, experiencing the void? Did the fact that whiteout conditions are very dangerous and could have led to your demise effect your mental state? Safety regulations on such an expedition are strict; it is not permitted to wander alone or lose contact with the camp or the team members. During the two “whiteouts” I’ve experienced, I was driving in a convoy of three Caterpillars traversing the ice to pick up supplies at the coast. The only time I could photograph the phenomenon, was when we stopped the vehicles to refuel. So I was only able to make a few photos of the actual phenomenon. In these cases, the photographic film recorded something my eyes could not perceive at the moment. All I could do was position the camera and press the shutter release without looking through the viewfinder as there was nothing specific to see. When I would point it towards a person or vehicle, these artefacts stood out clearly, the rest was a void of bright white light. I had been reading about the whiteout optical effect and the desire grew to join an expedition to photograph this elusive phenomenon. Once I got there, I was very lucky to be exposed to a full whiteout, but found myself in great difficulty capturing this alienating sensation in a photograph. As Hamish Fulton said: “an image can never compete with an experience”. But I wanted to communicate this experience, and ended up presenting a seemingly empty frame which still carries the suggestion or trace of that sensation. In the images taken during the “peak” of the whiteout, there is really nothing to see, I might as well have photographed a white sheet of paper. But it is a reproduction of a lived event. This is part of the magic of taking pictures, no? I was just reading about an installation in Chelsea, NYC, by the artist Doug Wheeler and it made me think about your work. Are you familiar with his work? No, unfortunately I have never seen his work in reality. Wheeler creates disorienting environments where the viewer is immersed in pure white light upon entering an installation, the walls are curved and there is no “edge” in the space. Wheeler wants people to experience light and space in a more direct way than is normally possible in the day to day. It would be interesting to compare one’s experience of Wheeler’s constructed “whiteout” phenomena, in a gallery, to the experience of an actual whiteout, whilst alone, amongst nature, in a freezing cold and snow-covered Antarctica. Would the person’s

experience of each instance be completely different or somewhat similar? Also do you think that the experience of gazing upon one of your photographs of a whiteout in a gallery setting might elicit a similar response/feeling within the viewer as with these other two scenarios? Would you like the viewer to get “lost” in your photograph? Whiteout consists of analogue photographs made on the location by myself. When presenting them as a continuous slide show in the gallery, this follows a familiar logic of display and presentation, and there is no disturbing or novel aspect in the presentation of the work: a slide projection in itself is a well-known medium or interface. I am interested by the work of Doug Wheeler, and judging from installation view of his work Infinity Environment, the effect must be stunning. Also Belgian artist Ann Veronica Janssen, has built spaces—on a smaller scale—where viewers lose all visual anchor points (L’Espace Infini, 2002). But in the end I present an image, rather than a physical experience. When exhibiting a photograph, I offer a visual experience which opens up a space for the viewer to negotiate, rather than manipulating the apprehension of that space. The artefact and document value (the fact that I was there, that I recorded the phenomenon on a piece of film, which is then projected again in a gallery space) is also important. Looking at photographs in an exhibition is a conventional ritual, and the viewer is not destabilized by it. But the abstraction lies more in the fact that these images depict a real event, which doesn’t seem to have a clear visual referent (in fact some images seem to be “empty”) and in the transformation of matter into light (the optical phenomenon of whiteout) and light into matter (the projection of the slide film: light passes through the film material and casts a ephemeral image unto the screen). Has the work of any of the Light and Space artists from the 1960s/70s, such as James Turrell or Robert Irwin, influenced your artistic practice? I admire the precision, poetry and singularity in Turell’s work very much. Through his work and interviews I was introduced to the concept of Ganzfeld. So, I can say I was influenced by James Turrell in an indirect way. But I would never dare to present a work in relation to his. Your images are not a document of a specific place and time but instead they capture a feeling. You say, “I like to create works that are otherworldly and strange, I don’t see any point in presenting an exact reproduction of the facts as they occur.” What draws you to make an image of a certain place/object? What makes a place special and worthy of being photographed? Could you speak about the term “traumatic realism” which you use when referring to your own work. I think I photograph the way I approach a place or what I project into it more than the actual place itself. The approach is conditioned by the history of that place, my personal affects or attachments, the nature of the light on that particular moment, etc. Even sensory qualities that never make it into the image, such as cold or silence, can play an important role. I use traumatic realism not in a psychological way (unresolved and painful past), but rather in the medical sense of it: a fracture or breaking point. It’s the moment where fact (the place) and fiction (my projection) meet.


Futuro, 2002

How do you scout out locations for future photo series? Do you research places on the internet? Do you ever randomly travel somewhere hoping to find something interesting to shoot? I used to think of it in terms of serendipity only, to be on the road with a camera encountering people, places, and phenomena. In recent years, however, I have come to enjoy research and started planning my trips more efficiently. By getting older, it feels like time becomes more precious. Many of your pictures are people-free, do you prefer to photograph places that are void of people? There isn’t a deliberate plan or agenda behind this, but maybe by not depicting people in the image, this leaves the viewer more free to create a narrative for him or herself? Often when people are depicted in a landscape photograph, the figures become principal characters, and the reading of the image gets narrowed down to a few plausible story lines. When the space before you is blank and devoid of people, the viewer himself becomes the one that is “in” that place, and the photograph can function more as a self-

reflexive tool. Like a mirror? I don’t know, this is speculation, but showing the space empty might invite the viewer to consider what she would do in such a place, when she is there alone. Your images are very painterly (partially because of the long exposure times you use when capturing the image to film) and the landscapes in many of your images bring to mind Caspar David Freidrich’s paintings. Is he an influence on you? Long exposure is something inherent to photography and therefore hard to perceive by the human eye. Caspar David Friedrich could see different things in different moments and bring them together in his atelier whenever he liked. His work appears realistic but is in fact pure fiction, drawing on memory and imagination. As a photographer I have to deal with the actuality and singularity of the location, to which I add fiction. The painterly strategies I use are duration, hierarchical compositions, overall sharpness, and I ignore legible time references such as clouds or heavy shadows. By avoiding those, I get into a timeless time, which one could experience as a painterly quality.

Caspar David Friedrich continues to have a strong impact. His paintings have the quality of ideograms: they communicate very strongly, and are remembered instantly. The atmosphere in his paintings, his treatment of light and the dramatic compositions are exceptional, and I think they still have a huge influence on image makers today. You have photographed forgotten structures that are (now) emblematic of the death of the utopian dream (of the 60s), such as Futuro—the prefabricated, transportable UFO ski cabin, now deserted in the forests of Finland. What attracts you to these structures? Are you interested in these objects as architectural oddities or are you more interested in what is left behind after the failure of an idea? Are you disappointed that the present time does not look as many imagined what “the future” would look like in the 1950s and 60s? These structures were once vessels for the imagination, symbolic objects, and I believe they still carry that function. Even though the positivist belief in the future as a time where technology would solve most problems and bring comfort Continued on page 57


Palanga, 2000

Near Hekla, 2000


ART Q and A with Violet Shuraka

Title TK, c-print, size, year

Left: Taxidermie I, oil on canvas, 40 X 35 cm, 2011; right: O.T.5, oil on canvas, 2006


All Christian Hellmich images courtesy Tanja Pol Galerie

Where did you grow up? Did the environment you experienced as a youth influence your decision to become an artist? Or influence your work at all? If so, how? I grew up in a small town near by Düsseldorf and later on I lived more and more in Düsseldorf, studied at Essen´s Folkwang-School, then lived in Cologne as well. I lived in the Rhineland-region (a part of Northrhine Westfalia) for quite a time. Even though I was not really raised strictly Catholic, the region’s catholicism was formative to me because of its flood of images, churches, museums, books, etc. As a kid this is really flashing! But it didn’t directly move me toward art. It was more a (dubious) entertainment.

The next kind of images I was really attracted to were comics. I started out working hoping to draw comics and much later I found out that studying fine art was a much more satisfying thing. I feel these two things are shining through in my work right now again. You now live in Berlin. I have interviewed a few artists from Berlin over the past year and they all tell me that Berlin is still thriving as an arts capital. Do you agree? Might be! I moved here from Cologne for personal reasons but I understand your point: A lot of art related people live or move here, nearly every bigger gallery tries to keep an off-shoot in Berlin.

And it´s still really fashionable to move here, especially as an artist. But hey, shouldn´t we all live in Brussels meanwhile? As I have heard this is through already as well… What do you like most about living in Berlin? Least? Does being in Berlin inspire your work? O.K. I have to confess beside the very different Cologne, I wouldn’t know where else in Germany I wanted to live. Most of all, because it´s the biggest city in Germany, which is indeed inspiring to me. Most of my friends and people I know live here. In comparison to other European cities, Berlin is big, quite cheap and has a social mix that I like. It has broad streets but also a difficult history…

Christian Hellmich


Lift, oil on canvas, 40 X 30 cm, 2011


Boot, oil on canvas, 200 x 200 cm, 2008

Tell me a little about the process of creating a new work. What inspires you to begin a picture? Actually there are two ways I initially begin: One is what Max Ernst called an optical provocation, which means that I mainly work with quotations. I have an archive/collection of pictorial material. This material can come from any available source. The selection is based on mainly personal decisions, the material needs to trigger a personal reaction. I reinterpret this material by using it in my work. During this process, I examine whether the material is recontextualizable and in most cases an extreme replacement of meaning takes place while I integrate it in my personal context. Then there is a second way of starting a work: what did I do within the last painting and is there a started work in the studio that I could adduct and vary on.

Do you begin sketching out your ideas by drawing something first? Do you ever work out a composition on a computer before you begin to paint? No, not prepatory. There are some editions I worked on with a computer and a very new series in collaboration with Georg Parthen that we just started working on. But the paintings are executed only analog. They begin as pure colorfields. From this I develop a very gestural and rough abstract moment that most times leads to very simple geometrical forms. From this point on I start to adduct the first representational element from my archive that I integrate to my cosmos and start to work over it again until there is a certain balance between openess and closeness.

In your artistic practice do you paint mainly with oils? Do any other materials find their way into your work? Yes, yes. You say that you will “borrow� from both high and low culture while scouring source material for your work, taking inspiration from magazines, photography, the internet, as well as other artist’s work. Do you believe that all of these elements in your work are equal? Yes. You seem to have an affinity for modernist architecture. What interests you about this architectural style? Are you drawn to the work of any architects in particular?


occur in my painting still today. But pragmatically it became too abstract for me redefining an architectonical box again and again. One side effect is that you can squeeze it, stretch it, cut it etc, but as long as there is a rest of figuration in it, you will always have to deal with the box. I opened the sphere of influence for a variety spread, but a lot of the methods I used actually stayed the same. There are still many things you could cognize but do not recognize. It´s still a cut through a pictorial noise. I find the architecture in Berlin to be fascinating. Are there any buildings in Berlin (or fragments of them) that make an appearance in your work? No, besides very few exceptions, no real existing things appear in my paintings. Geometric design patterns and painterly textures often repeat from one canvas to another. Is your aim to create a narrative between the works by using the same repetitive patterns over multiple canvasses? Hmm, not really. I have always exhibited the constructedness and modularity of my paintings. The exchangeable patterns, textures, recognizable representational parts meant to underline this. For a very long time I tried to avoid as much narration as possible, which changed in way, even though it happened also in a very abstract way. Do you utilize the geometric grid to structure the work? I am not really sure about your question. To me the grid was an important tool, regarding to content more than a painterly tool ,to transfer a sketch or something. Rosalind Krauss´use of the idea of the grid made some sense and was a personal benchmark to modernism to me.

Coach, oil on canvas, 40 x 26cm, 2010

There are surely some of my favorite architects among the modernists. But since I was living and studying in Essen when I started these paintings, my architectural surrounding didn’t really reference modernism in the original way. Essen as an industrial production city was destroyed in big parts during the Second World War and was rebuild in quite a typical german post-war style that didn’t come out as a new, self- and mediareferencial, universal utopian world language. Some misunderstood modernism found its way into my works. The banality that was often mistaken as modernism was pleasantly useful for

the spacial modular-based ideas of painting that I had during these times. Architectural elements recur throughout your work but in your newer work the elements are more abstracted and harder to recognize. How did this shift in style come about? After I tried a lot of other media and processes, it became clear to me I had to make a decision where and how to incorporate into the field of painting.The seemingly representational, architectural elements where a good starting point for me. There are a lot of processes and ways that

Also, in your newer work, cylindrical pill-like shapes make their way onto the canvas. Are these forms meant to represent anything? Or are they acting as a decorative element overlaying the abstracted architectural fragments? As I said, I tried to avoid a narrative moment in my work for a very long time. The pill-like, or as a lot of people have seen them, balloon-like forms, developed coincidentally from a form I discovered in an advertisement. It was so simple and so open. On the other hand it had a very explicit quality at the same time. It’s use in a variety of my works, allowed me to introduce this thing as a kind of narrative moment. Since every perception has connotation, I am very interested how far one could push an image before it overturns in one direction. The painting Feeding looks quite different from all of the other paintings of yours I have seen, it has an almost eerie feel about it. Could you talk a bit about this work? In the 1980s and 90s, the most common goal in (German) painting was, that it must have to “drop off the horse,” meaning: it had to fail; a lot of artist charged the medium of painting with functions/ goals that it obviously couldn’t possibly achieve. Even though it wasn´t a direct influence, people like Martin Kippenberger, Albert Oehlen, etc., had a very bright emission on me. But it was some time ago I was very touched by some French


untitled, oil on canvas, 204 x 180 cm, 2010 Crosstrainer, oil on canvas, 280 X 204 cm, 2011

late 19th century paintings I have seen in Paris. First of all I was impressed how Vuillard pointed to a gap “in between.” It was just that moment where freedom of art was binding, but it wasn’t modernism yet, that he was able to employ and refer to the medium of painting itself and still find a very personal access. This is somehow contrary to the late contemporary art I grew up with. I guess that’s a very old insight but it connected to my faible for a certain relation of openess and closure. In 2011 I had the impression that I kept some things out of my work for such a long time, so I was practically forced to just do it (like the narrative moments I’ve been speaking about). The very abstract (seeming) work I have been creating and some further personal needs have lead me towards a more representational and engaging method for now. For several reasons there is no depictions of humans in my work. If you don´t refer to pop or media reflection, for me painting humans still has to do a lot with suffering flesh, which I didn’t wanted to do. The definitions within the exactitude of the vague that I am doing right now includes a more personal admission, which has an uncanny effect.

The biomorphic shape in If I Was a Carpenter is the one time a figure (albeit an abstracted one) appears in your work. Could you talk a bit about this work? Oh, you mean the grinning vase? Ontological problems... There are rarely humans depicted in your paintings (at least in the ones that I have seen). Have you ever painted figures in your work? Is there a reason why your pictures are void of people? For some reasons mentioned above I find it difficult. But I think it is still even more important to me to make the beholder the leading actor. Everyone should be able to step inside the works and engage with different connections. Since I am looking at photographic reproductions of your work I am not sure of the physical actuality of the painted marks in the paintings, do you paint mostly in a flat style or do the paintings have complex and varied textural surfaces? Photographic reproductions are a problem indeed, as long as you take them frontal, which unfortunately is obligatory. In this way you can not

see a lot of shining through layers or the amount of paint I use, that give the works a relief-like quality. So, the reproductions stay a reference. But it’s O.K. It should be an invitation to come and have a look at the original. Which artists inspire you? Which artists would you cite as influences? Are there any painters of modernist abstraction that you are especially drawn to? As explained above I am really into this second impressionist wave artist right now, Bonnard, Vuillard. And then Paul Sérusier. Later I also rediscovered Ljubow Sergejewna Popowa, who, I guess would be the most modernistic artist I could offer right now. What projects are you working on currently? Right now I am working on my first institutional solo show, at Von der Heydt-Kunsthalle in Germany, coming up in June this year. Later on this year there will be an other institutional show in Cologne. What could you imagine doing if you did not create art? I would most definitely be cosmonaut or ornithologist.


untitled, 2004, 23.6 x 19.7 in, from Beaugrenelle


ART Q and A with Violet Shuraka

Firma, 2010, 41 x 29.6 in, from Landschaften

You live in Berlin currently. What do you like most about living in Berlin? Least? The city is exciting and inspiring, yet life remains relaxed. “Always changing, never twice the same.� Do you frequently travel outside of Berlin (and Germany) to find subject matter for your artmaking practice? Traveling puts me in a state of heightened awareness and allows me to clearly focus on a body of work. For some projects it is a crucial part and I could not produce a series like Landschaften without extensive trips to find these locations. How do you choose/scout out locations for future photo series? What is your conceptualizing process like?

I change my process according to the work I am producing. Partially I know the locations for my photographs from previous experience, partially I visit locations based on research. Sometimes I intuitively choose a region to travel to which I hope offers physical representations of ideas for images I already have in my head. Has your work always consisted of digitally constructed, altered images? Or was there a time when you made more straightforward documentary photographs? Are the images in the series Carports strictly documentary and not digitally manipulated? Did a shift in your work occur or do you work on both types of series simultaneously?

I started out using photography traditionally, shooting 35mm and developing my own film. Since then I have moved through a lot of different formats and techniques slowly shifting towards digital tools. This evolution has expanded my understanding of the medium and allows me to make my work with far less compromises than traditional techniques. The images in this series Landschaften, such as Kuppeln, Enklave, and Dorf, are not real places, they are constructed. Could you talk a bit about your process of creating a series like Landschaften? Where do the individual elements, such as the Buckminster Fuller style domes in

Georg Parthen


Kuppeln, 29.6 x 48.9 in, 2007, from Landschaften

Multiplex XXXIII, (Cinestar Kรถln), 2007, 21.2 x 15.8 in, from Multiplex


untitled, 2004, 23.6 x 19.7 in, from Beaugrenelle

Kuppeln, that populate the landscapes come from? Have you shot all of the elements used in the photographs yourself? Do you ever source bits and pieces of imagery from elsewhere (image banks, the internet, etc.)? Thus far I have been photographing all elements for my images myself, mostly for practical and partially for technical reasons. Before I find it I usually I do not really know what i searched, so I heavily rely on the world to provide what I am longing for. The moment I am physically present in front of one of these buildings or landscapes very much defines the shape of the work I am going to make from it. I like this romantic idea and don´t want to replace this with an online image search. Also I need a certain technical quality for my sketches I don’t think I could source currently. Usually I make trips to a certain region or location to photograph for my archive which consists of anything from image fragments to complete shots where most of the final work is already inclosed. Later in the studio I construct the Landschaften from those. Often I work on two different versions

of the same image side by side to trying to carve out different elements until I can decide which one feels and functions better. The landscapes (from the series Landschaften) bring to mind Caspar David Friedrich’s paintings, is he an influence on you? Are your images constructed in a manner similar to how CDF worked, piecing together many different sketches to create one final picture? When first starting to make the Lanschaften I did research Caspar David Friedrichs’s work. There are more differences than similarities to our works and approaches though, even though I also make my images in the studio from sketches I compile in nature. Apart from the great manual difference between painting a canvas from drawings in a sketchbook and montaging photographs on a computer Caspar David Friedrich heavily encoded meaning into his work through a use of elements and symbols to the point where a certain color represents a certain emotion, something I have no interest in.

Also not all my landscapes are pieced together; sometimes I make one from a single capture, adding or changing certain elements. I would not hesitate to include an image in the series that has not been altered at all if it would evoke the same doubts in me as the others. The architecture that makes its way into your landscape pictures, in the series Landschaften particularly, tends to overtake the natural landscapes and look somewhat foreboding, the structures do not look like they belong in the setting, the complete picture sometimes does not seem to make sense but one is not sure why. The architecture also looks somewhat futuristic (as in the work Firma). There are no roads leading up to these architectural constructions. When constructing these imagined places are you visualizing a land which may have once been inhabited and has now been deserted and left to decay? Are you interested in architectural ruins in this work (or any of your work)?


Enklave, 2009, 37 x 63 in, from Landschaften

No. My use of architecture is not single-coded. Usually I work with structures that are not signifiers of a certain location but rather of a time and vision. I want a contemporary appeal yet I am interested more in the image than the the individual structure that was in front of my camera. The architecture stands loosely as a metaphor for the different conceptual layers of construction I wish people to contemplate. Here the structural construction of the architecture and the fabrication of a realistic landscape in the work, there the photographic transformation and your process of creating meaning in the world. Are you imposing (utopian) ideals of the 20th/21st century of progress, growth, and building with the placement of huge man-made constructions/formations in the midst of these natural, untouched landscapes? Definitely. If you look at my work from recent years I too am progressing towards the future regarding the historical references of the individual works. I started out with work about baroque architecture, then made the the Beaugrenelle series about a Parisian quarter which had been envisioned as a vision of urban life in the 1970s. After Beaugrenelle I made work about Multiplex cinemas built in the last two decades and have pretty much reached the present time with the Novae series and the recent video works. A documentary photographer attempts to produce truthful and objective images on film (or with a digital camera), however, making a photograph that represents the truth may be an impossible goal—as there may not be a way of representing universal truth and reality changes

from moment to moment. Do you feel that an image can be truly objective or is it always subjective? How do you feel about the idea of “the decisive moment”? “Compared to a painting the photograph loses its own reality more and more as it renders the other one. That way the only ‘reality’ of a photograph is its own unreality, its not-being-there is its actual quality.” (badly translated from: Gerhard Richter: “Text”, pg. 114, letter to Benjamin H.D. Buchloh, 1979). I do not think an image can either be objective or subjective and I am not even sure what these attributes really mean. As artists working with photography we ponder and argue about these questions all the time, especially with curators and art historians. A photograph is always a pretty severe abstraction from what happened in front of the apparatus and we are all more or less consciously aware of that. In my work there is no decisive moment. There are only moments, sometimes hundreds in which the shutter of my camera has fired. My images do not refer to an instant of time stretched infinitely but rather to have no time at all, as paradox as it sounds. This is their reality—an indefinite moment. You use the techniques of a documentary photographer but with a completely different goal for your end result. Are you are questioning the role of the photograph in society as a document of truth, considering that photography also has the ability to be misleading and false (and is often used for these means)? Do you believe all reality is constructed in relation to photography?

I do believe that all reality is constructed in relation to photography. But all meaning is constructed in regards to reality. What is it about the blurring of the line between construction and documentation that interests you? When an image does not affirm what you already know you will try to make sense within the system of all your knowledge and find a meaningful place for the new bit it just received. If these incongruencies happen over and over again there is a chance that you start to reconfigure your system, recontextualizing everything you know. Working this way I hope to create an emotional and rational tension where my work can actually change how the viewers perceive their world. You have said, “I would love to see imagery that is so normal or so boring or even so bad that I can hardly stand looking at it.” Do you have any examples of images that have succeeded in this task? What is it about the concept of an image being boring, hideously beautiful, or just plain bad that interests you? Do you like these images? I feel these qualities are often easily discounted but can be used for artistic enquiry in many ways. Boredom and annoyance are strong qualities of a work that can create a disturbance or even an annoyance. You photograph the interiors of stores that sell electronic-based consumer goods in the Novae series, such as televisions, mobile phones, stereo systems, dvds, and music discs. How do you feel an individual’s desire is shaped for these electronic objects when the environment one purchases them from is so sterile (to almost a surreal degree)? Are you interested in the creation of desire for newer


untitled (mmk 1), 2010, 20.5 x 15 in, from Novae

untitled (ecs 1), 2010, 20.5 x 15.4 in, from Novae

Plateau, 2007, 29.6 x 39.8 in, from Landschaften


Multiplex XXVIII, (Cinestar Dortmund), 2007, 23 x 18.1 in, from Multiplex


Berg, 2009, 37 x 70.5 in, from Landschaften

and newer technology? Are you critiquing the rampant consumerism of today’s world in this series? Novae is definitely a comment on these spaces but I did not intend it as a critique of consumerism. I am filled with wonder when I spend time at these stores and perceive them as the “Wunderkammern” of our time. Their visual abundance is beyond what the human mind is able to compile and the natural response seems to be—buy something, then leave immediately. Could you tell me a bit about the process of creating the images of the superstores in Novae? The images of these interiors seem hyperreal, the objects within the spaces look sculptural. Are you lighting the space in a certain way while shooting to achieve this hyperreal effect, are the images enhanced in Photoshop, or is this a relatively accurate representation of how the goods are marketed to the consumer—stacked, orderly, well-lit? As most of my works, the images in Novae are montages from several images to create a rendering that I hold specific and true to these spaces. It took me a while to figure out how to deal with these spaces and overflow of visual information. After shooting for a while I realized that not to get lost I made these strict image compositions, concentrating on the the sculptural qualities of the store displays. I decided to embrace that and make the images where all the small fragments demand your attention equally and only the sculptural order provides some emotional resting place. Most of your pictures are people-free, do people/ figures ever make an appearance in your work? For my questions of inquiry figures have not [yet] been important. You mentioned that lately your work is growing less and less “project-oriented” or “pre-

visualized”. You are creating more video works rather than still images, such as the Modul series and untitled (AFX). Could you talk a bit about how this shift occurred and the direction you see your work going in in the future? I grew tired of working from my preconceptions of the world. Working with a concept has the benefit to know the boundaries of a project and it speeds up my working process. However, I felt it also limited my possibility for true discovery, which I wanted to allow in my work to a greater extent. In the past two years I have shifted my process towards a more circular way of working where my work acts as a source for itself, which dictates the form and direction it is going. The introduction of video work is a direct result of this shift. In your Modul videos, you’ve focused on long static shots of noisy generators against backdrops where elements such as tree branches and leaves jostle minimally in the breeze. Can you talk about what type of buildings these generators are servicing? Are they residential properties? Do the structures, largely unseen in the work, for which these machines exist, play a role or is the generator itself the central focus of the work? The buildings they are serving are schools and office buildings; not unlike the one I used in Firma. On recent trips to the U.S. I grew aware of these “black boxes” that create the background sound of our time, yet remain mostly unnoticed. As with many technical devices we need to rely on abstract knowledge in order to understand what they are doing, in this case these “modules” serve as cooling devices for the houses. Besides their main function they also consume a lot of power and produce noise and heat. These generators are objects that the average person would pass by without ever taking notice of or considering. With the videos focusing on

them so intently, it seems to me that the objects take on a whole new set of traits or characteristics. I don’t want to make the jump of saying this humanizes them but it does seem to lend them an individuality or even a personality that is born wholly of the unusual attention being paid to them. Is this an intent of the work, that we consider these machines outside of their usual context of purely functional objects? Similarly, we can look at these videos and see very little actually going on that is immediately visual. However, when we think of the purpose of these central objects, to provide power and electricity to buildings housing or servicing large numbers of people, it is also possible to imagine a multitude of lives and stories unfolding behind the scene. Transferred into a representative work my “Modules” become absurd functional objects; their purpose not to cool the building they are servicing but to represent themselves and by doing that generating heat and noise in the exhibition space. On second sight one might discover a strangeness in them which could be result from the fact that the videos are montaged but also could be a quality of the objects themselves. Did you have any desire for these seemingly straightforward shots to serve as referential devices in this way or as a means through which to contemplate the relationships between people and their environments? Yes. Is the noise the generator is creating an important aspect of this work? Have you ever worked on sound pieces in the past? It is important, no I have not worked with sound before. Have you been looking at any artists who do work with sound in their art practice as of late? I just finished watching Mark Leckey’s GreenScreenRefrigerator which is amazing. His work disturbs and inspires me. Continued on page 57


ART Q and A with Violet Shuraka

Circus On The Frontier, 2009


You live in L.A. How long have you lived there? What do you like most about living there? I do live in L.A., I moved from rainy Oregon. I love it here. There is so much amazing art coming out of L.A. right now, and there is a lot to do: hiking, biking, surfing, museums, different kinds of food... Have you spent any time in NYC or on the East Coast? Does being on the West Coast inspire your work? I love New York! for some of the same reasons as L.A.—galleries, food, endless cool stuff to do, great public art, but I love the lightness and sunshine in L.A.. I definitely think my work has a lot of influence from Southern California, My work is really inspired by natural environments. Do you feel that there is a lot of interesting artwork being created in L.A. right now? Yes, there are really great artists living and working here: Mel Kadel, Shepard Fairey, Retna. I love seeing new murals and how art is becoming more of a public thing once again, like it was in the 40s when the populist culture of the Mexican mural spread to Los Angeles and the greater U.S.. Where did you grow up? Were you a creative youth? I grew up in Oregon, my mom was a school teacher, and my earliest memories are of sitting at a little desk and making stuff—drawing and gluing while my mom was cooking in the kitchen. My mom was also in school when I was little and I remember going to her classes and drawing during the lectures. You started out designing record covers and t-shirts for Oregon’s music scene in the early 90s and you were also in a band. How did your past creative endeavors lead you to the artwork that you are creating now? The punk art of the 70s was really inspiring to me. I liked the iconic and simplistic imagery. I liked the messy silk screened look, so when I got into my first band I was so excited to start making shirts and record covers. We were very DIY, even carrying our silkscreen on the road to screen shirts for people at our shows to make gas money to get to the next gig. I think the DIY ethic of the times definitely made me the artist I am. I mean, there weren’t many other girls making weird art and hanging it in their local punk clubs and having art shows back then. There certainly weren’t cool galleries in Portland then, so I just was propelled by my own desire to create, and by the music I was listening to that inspired me to rebel against the norm. What were some of the bands that you created artwork for in the 90s? Do you still create artwork for bands? I mostly made stuff for the bands that I was in Adickdid, The TeenAngels, Juned, The Hindi Guns and a few other local bands. Does music influence your work? I like listening to music when I paint. I love listening to Jarvis Cocker’s Sunday Service on BBC radio on the internet, it is the highlight of my week when I am in the studio painting.

deedee cheriel


Trying To See This As A Minor Setback, 2012

Could you talk about the repeated use of the bear image in your work? Who is this mysterious bear and why does he so often appear to be plagued with some sort of existential malaise, a la Munch’s The Scream? Is the bear pissed off at the world? Yes, and no... The bears have always symbolized the Buddhist idea that to desire is to suffer. I think I first started painting bears when I quit smoking, and I was constantly looking for something outside myself to fill up the emptiness left by overcoming that addiction. I quit drinking, smoking, drugs, all that stuff awhile ago. It was so dark, but the desire for things outside of myself— whether it is a piece of art, or a piece of cake, or to gossip—whatever the need is that is taking me out of the moment, that is making me suffer, is the thing that the bear symbolizes, so the bear is the perfect metaphor, the ceaseless unending desire that compels most people to consume, to over consume, to feed their addictions to stuff or drink or drugs. I think we can all relate. Are the characters in your pictures purely fictional or are they based upon people you know?

That is funny. I am largely driven to create out of pain, or maybe I use my work to solve problems. Recently I had a crush on this guy, who is now my boyfriend. I had told a couple of my close friends, who decided it was a competition of sorts. With no loyalty to the friendship I would watch from afar as they followed him around. It was so painful to watch the long term friendships disintegrate before my eyes, and walk away from this guy I liked, but I didn’t want to compete so I just decided to hang out elsewhere with other people. My sadness over losing the friendship and feelings of being betrayed and burned came out in this really petty way. I mean I couldn’t help feeling that the whole situation was very high schoolish and in high school I obsessively drew horses, and one of the girls had some horse like qualities (according to one of my friends) so I just started drawing all of these culty brainwashed girls as horses, following around and worshipping these masculine bear creatures. It was amazing how satisfying (albeit juvenile) to transform my crappy feelings into a whole body of work for a show.

Your illustrations are populated by creatures found primarily in the Pacific Northwest, have you always drawn these particular animals (the bear, the owl, large wild cats)? Are you a fan of exploring the woods and camping out in the wilderness? Have you ever come into contact with any of these animals in the wild? As a kid, my mom took us camping for weeks at a time. Some of my most fun memories are of hiking in the woods in Oregon, sitting naked in hot springs in the woods while it was raining. One time my brother and I found a headless cow upside down in a stream that had bear claw marks all over it, and we still stayed in the campground near where it happened that night. We used to live in a log cabin in Wyoming that bears would come near all the time, and I still hear owls up by my parents house when I go visit, so yeah, animals from the Pacific Northwest are a huge inspiration to me. How did the tree creatures and animal human hybrids that are repeated in your work come to be? The first girl with a bird head was a caricature of this girl in Santiago, Chile. I was living there,


Clockwise from top left: Atomic Tapestry, 2010; England Is Dreaming, 2011; Oasis, 2011; Good Morning Sunshine, 2008

painting and playing in bands. My bandmate lived on the 21st floor of this building, and we would sit around and drink wine and do lots of drugs and his skinny model girlfriend would wander around the apartment talking in a little high-pitched voice, she was like this little beautiful bird in a cage, living up above the dirty city! Many of the characters in your work are involved in blatantly sexual acts, which bring to mind images you might see in the Kama Sutra or in a relief in a Hindu temple in India. Are these works an influence on your illustrations? I am half Indian, and have spent time in India visiting family, and was initially inspired by one of my trips to a temple in Southern India where there was some hardcore monkey on giraffe, on tiger on bear action. The relief carvings were painted some really vibrant colors. They lined the outer parameter of the inner sanctum of the temple. I studied Indian temple imagery in college, and those things tend to symbolize spiritual

inter-connectedness, and fertility for the earth and the crops—plentitude, abundance, etc. I guess my thoughts on it, beside the fact each human desires that connectedness—both emotionally and spiritually—are that the sexual imagery is my response to the disconnectedness, anger, and violence that we are bombarded with on a daily basis in our culture. Your work also seems to reference the patterns and colors found in Indian textiles. Does Indian culture influence your work? Have you spent time in India? I do spend time with my family in India when I can. I was really inspired by the feminist art of the 60s that used textile patterns as a way of bringing “women’s work” into high art. I like textile patterns, and think it is interesting that every culture has their own unique patterns. Some of the characters in your portraits are dressed in traditional Indian clothing while in other works they are wearing high society

gowns and look like they may have just walked off the lawn of a George Seurat painting. Are you interested in fashion? Why do these two styles appeal to you in particular? I like to play with the issues of class. What is your process like when creating your work? Do you draw by hand? Do you use a computer when creating your pictures? Do you ever make silkscreen prints? I draw, no computer rendering. Yes, I have been doing a lot more printmaking because I feel it makes my work more accessible to people who can’t afford a painting. You told me that you just finished a body of work for a show. Is it in L.A.? I have a show up at Merry Karnowsky Gallery in Los Angeles right now. I also have upcoming shows in Melbourne and in the UK. Where can we find you on the world wide web? www.deedeecheriel.com


ART

Photo credit: Morgan Lehman Gallery

Q and A with Violet Shuraka

Mercedes Planter, Watercolor on paper, 22” x 30”, 2007

Where did you grow up? Did the environment you experienced as a youth influence your decision to become an artist? Or influence your work at all? If so, how? I was born in Warren, Ohio but my family moved to Wisconsin when I was young. I feel strongly about having lived in Wisconsin and have a lot of pride from growing up there. I also spent seven years at University of Wisconsin at Madison. I transferred from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, finished my undergraduate degree and stayed to receive my MFA in painting. My father was trained as an architect and my mother was a sculptor. My siblings and I always had real art supplies and encouragement from both of them. Being in Wisconsin and so close to Chicago there were Frank Lloyd Wright buildings and houses everywhere. I feel like I have always known who he was. The same is true of Mies van der Rohe…my parents started teaching us about art and architecture very early. You now live in New York City. What do you like most about living in New York? Least? Does being in New York inspire your work? I love NYC. I love the bridges, especially the Brooklyn Bridge at night. I had a great view of the Manhattan

Bridge when I was in the Marie Walsh Sharpe Studio Program. And now, in my current studio, I have a view of the Queensboro Bridge. I also love the museums… all of them. Yes, living in New York City inspires me and my work. Walking around the city I am always in awe of the architecture, the patterns and the light that are a part of the cityscape. I find it so beautiful. You just came back from a residency in Georgia. Tell me a little bit about that. Were you exposed to any different kinds of architecture that you can imagine painting in the future? Were you working on paintings of architecture while you were there? My partner, Paul Villinski, is also an artist. We were both artists-in-residence at Serenbe for almost six weeks and we took our 15 month old son with us. Serenbe is a little sustainable village of 250 people in Chattahoochee Hills. They have a residency program, an organic farm, a couple of restaurants and 1000 acres of wooded land. I spent most of my studio time working on paintings of California Modernist houses. I was very absorbed in creating these new paintings, they are quite different for me. I did not do any research for future projects. When I wasn’t in the studio, Paul, Lark and I spent a lot of time hiking in the woods and watching the farm animals. Ten baby goats were born while we were there. It was very

Amy Park


Photo credit: Morgan Lehman Gallery Argos Experimental Concrete Factory, Watercolor on paper, 60� x 48�, 2010


Photo credit: Morgan Lehman Gallery


Photo credit: Kopeikin Gallery Left: AT&T White Brick, Vertical, Watercolor on paper, 60” x 48”, 2006; right: Chemosphere, Watercolor on paper, 30” x 22”, 2012


Photo credit: Kopeikin Gallery

etc...) in a different manner. Can you talk a bit about why you treat the two elements within a painting differently. I paint the architecture with hard edges because that is how I see it. I am drawn to buildings that are not ornate and have sculptural qualities. I love the contrast within the painting when the hard edged structure meets the organic sky and vegetation. For some reason, I have the patience required to paint 100 windows, but I can’t paint every leaf on a plant. Are you a fan of the work of Morris Louis and Helen Frankenthaler? They were using other kinds of paints (and techniques) to achieve a watercolor effect. There is definitely a similarity about the way the paint stains the paper/canvas in all of your work. The sky, the trees, and the mountain in your Shulman House and Studio definitely brings these artists to mind. Do you think that there work has influenced you at all? I LOVE Morris Louis and Helen Frankenthaler. I was so happy that you recognized that both of them might be influential in my painting. When I lived in Washington, D.C., I went to the National Gallery all the time. I’d visit Frankenthaler’s Mountains and Sea first. And the Philips Collection has amazing Morris Louis paintings. I started working larger as a result of their influence on me. Morris Louis worked in a spare bedroom in his Washington, DC house. After I learned that, I said to myself that I could not let the size of my studio dictate the scale of my paintings. I made my ten foot, AT&T painting in a space that was about 100 square feet. Do any other materials find their way into your work? I mostly use watercolor on paper and ink on paper. I also do collages with watercolors and other kinds of paper. And recently, I started making porcelain pieces. I love ceramics and find myself trying to create the “perfect” cup, bowl or plate. I created an installation of porcelain dishes that were stacked on a long, 120 inch watercolor that hung from the wall and lay on a low wooden shelf. It was part of the inaugural show at The Poor Farm, Michelle Grabner and Brad Killiam’s residency program and exhibition space in Manawa, Wisconsin.

Shulman House and Studio, Watercolor on paper, 30” x 22”, 2012

revitalizing to me to spend some time out of NYC. It was fantastic to be in such a beautiful place, but I am happy to be home in New York. Tell me a little about the process of creating a new work. What inspires you to begin a picture? I spend a lot of time looking at photos of buildings, usually my own. There is always something that I find intriguing in the photo: a color, form, pattern or the composition. I start from whatever that visual cue is. Do you begin sketching out your ideas by drawing something first? Do you ever work out a composition on a computer before you begin to paint? My “sketches” are finished 22” x 30” paintings. I do these before I paint a large (60” x 48”) watercolor. In the small version, I am able to work out all of the details and create a plan for the large painting. I also can tell from a small painting if a large one will work. I only use a computer to adjust and print the digital images I will use for the paintings. There is very minimal amount of technology used. In your artistic practice do you paint primarily with watercolors. How did you first begin working with watercolors and why are you drawn to this particular medium?

I always had watercolors to paint with as a kid. While I was in school at UW-Madison, I would make watercolor sketches in preparation for my oil paintings. The watercolors were always so much better. At a certain point in graduate school, I just stopped making oil paintings. It was difficult at first, because I felt like oil paintings were more important than watercolors. Over time, I changed my mind and I believe that hierarchy has dissolved in the contemporary art world. It is interesting that you have chosen to work with watercolor when painting architecture, in particular modernist architecture, which has hard lines and geometric forms. How do you control the watercolor paint as it tends to be a more organic medium which spreads out when laid down on paper. Watercolor is actually more controllable than most people think. It takes practice, but the key is to know where the paper is wet. If you want a soft line you use the wetness. If you want a hard, crisp line, wait for the area to dry. Like anything, it just takes practice. I can’t tell you how many thousands of straight lines I have painted! I used to be very nervous about it, but no more. I realized I have never screwed one up. It seems that in your images you paint the architecture and organic forms (such as plants, trees,

You seem to have an affinity for modernist architecture. What interests you about this architectural style? Are you drawn to the work of any architects in particular? Have you ever studied architecture? Modernist architecture has elements of abstraction that are of great interest to me: repetition, color, form and overall compositions. I spend a lot of time researching my favorite architects: Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier, Alvar Aalto, Oscar Niemeyer, Charles and Ray Eames, Richard Neutra, John Lautner, and others. I have never studied the practice of architecture, but I have had one architecture history class. The course was actually quite important to me and my work. I convinced my professor to let me make an ink drawing of every slide we saw instead of writing papers and taking exams. I have hundreds of drawings and I still make them. In your earlier work you painted architecture and architectural details that were slightly more abstracted, such as a close up of a side of a building, emphasizing the window patterns (such as in Blue & Violet Post Office or Argos Building [for Experimental Concrete] Colombia) and in your newer work you are pulling back on the frame and including a more complete representation of the structure in your painting. How did this shift in perspective come about? I have a more complete representation in these new paintings because my sources are Julius Shulman photographs. I am cropping them, but not as much as I would my own pictures. I am using Shulman photographs because the houses and buildings I want to paint are not open to the public. I can only research them through historic photos. This is my best access into the world of California Modernism. I will be exhibiting these paintings at Kopeikin Gallery in June.


Photo credit: Morgan Lehman Gallery Vision of Aalto’s Viipuri Library, Watercolor on paper, 22” x 30”, 2007

Could you tell me about the paintings of the AT&T Switching Station, these might be the most abstract of the architectural works I have seen of yours. I made the AT&T paintings for a two person show I had with my friend, Philip Vanderhyden, at the College of DuPage. I was interested in how abstract buildings can become at a distance and also close up. The AT&T Switching Station is a windowless, white brick fortress on the west side of NYC. Visually, it is interesting because of its sculptural form and I thought it was perfect for painting—close-up and at a distance. I knew the building from the documentary movie Painters Painting. It was a film Philip and I watched many times while we were in school at UW-Madison. Do you paint from your own photographs of buildings, images that might have been shot at an off angle or from a car window? Yes, I work from my own off angle photos or ones taken from the back of a motorcycle. I am not a great photographer and I don’t like going out to photograph buildings. So, I generally take them as I am driving or waiting for the walk sign. You mentioned to me that now you are painting from Julius Shulman’s architectural photos of famous residences and buildings. Why did you decide to switch from working from a more snapshot aesthetic photo composition to more structured and formal (almost documentary, although still artistic) type image? I really wanted to paint California Modernist houses and buildings, and since I live in New York City, my best access into that world is through books and the

internet. I decided to work from Shulman’s photos in particular. They are the best. And because his photos are structured I stayed with that. Is there one building that you would love to paint but have not yet? Have any NYC buildings made an appearance in your work? Have you seen most of the buildings that you paint in real life? There are so many building on my list! I have painted a lot of NYC buildings: the AT&T Switching Station is on 10th Ave. and 50th, the Post Office series is from a building on 3rd Avenue and 52nd Street, and the Fashion Institute of Technology campus. I have also painted the Brooklyn Bridge six times and many other buildings in New York City. Yes, I have seen most of the buildings I have painted. It is extremely helpful for me to know the buildings as well as I can, and seeing it for a few minutes in person can make a huge difference in the final painting. Could you speak a bit about your use of color. Much of your work is painted in subdued hues, what draws you to this particular color palette? My work actually is more colorful in person. Photos don’t do a good job of showing how colorful they are. Usually, the buildings I am painting are neutral in color. I either make up the color, or find a glimpse of a color in the photo and use that for most of the building. If I am working from found photos, they are almost always black and white. When that happens, I invent the color. I rely on a color wheel and choose based on color theory. There are rarely humans depicted in your paintings. Have you ever made figurative work? Is there a

reason why your pictures are void of people? No, I have not made figurative work. It doesn’t interest me as a subject matter because of the narrative and or psychology that goes along with people. Which artists inspire you? Which artists would you cite as influences? Are there any painters of modernist abstraction that you are especially drawn to? I love abstraction and when I look for outside inspiration I go to my favorites: Morris Louis, Paul Klee, Bridget Riley, Helen Frankenthaler, Agnes Martin and Ellsworth Kelly. I rarely look at representational painting but some of my favorite artists are Gerhard Richter, Sarah Morris and Vija Clemins. What projects are you working on currently? Right now I am finishing paintings for my upcoming show at Kopeikin Gallery in Los Angeles. I also have two prints that will be released by 20 x 200 in June. Otherwise, I am starting to think about some new big paintings of New York City and Brazil. You have showed at Morgan Lehman Gallery in New York City. Do you have any shows coming up in the near future? I am in a works on paper show right now at Hespe Gallery in San Francisco. My show of Julius Shulman inspired paintings will be at Kopeikin Gallery in Los Angeles on June 2 through July 7, 2012. What could you imagine doing if you did not create art? I can’t imagine not making art.


Studio view of The Vertical Shadows in progress, Variable dimensions, Various mediums including paint, cloth, wood, cardboard, plaster and wax, 2008.


ART Q and A with Violet Shuraka

You grew up in Mexico City and Vancouver, Canada, then went to undergrad and graduate school at the Art Institute of Chicago. Do you feel that being in Chicago influences your work at all? If so, how? Does it matter where you are for you to maintain an art practice? I was born in Mexico City and when I was a teenager my entire family moved to Vancouver, British Columbia. In a nutshell, the eventfulness of that move at that particular point in my development—from one culture to another, from one language to another, and from one perceptual space to another—is more significantly generative of my thinking as an artist than the city of Chicago has been up to now. This may be a small thing, but important nonetheless: I remember that when I first moved to Chicago I could not relate to the flatness of the land. Many friends who grew up in the Midwest crave the openness of the prairies, but I have not had such craving; at least not yet. When I first arrived in Chicago, I could not understand how I was going to survive without mountains nearby: mountains as points of orientation but also as markers of comparative proportion, of geographical heterogeneity. But Lake Michigan and the big Midwestern sky became points of phenomenological reference. I think that wherever I may live, I would look for these types of points of reference. Like so many people with whom I went to school, I used to see myself as someone with one foot out of the Chicago door. It took a while, but now I can fathom life in Chicago as creatively challenging in the long term. In some ways Chicago can be very cosmopolitan: think of all the architectural landmarks in the city that are of both homegrown and international significance. At the same time Chicago can feel very regional; this can cut both ways, as insular or locally fulfilling and expansive. As far as what I need in order to maintain an art practice, I need the confluence of a few things, all of which point to stability, stimulation and space. I have stepchildren (they are

teenagers) and my husband is a professor of anthropology at the University of Chicago. The stability and stimulation that come from my family life help me maintain a discipline. They provide the foundation for the mental and physical space in which imaginative and critical work unfolds. Several years ago I began to teach at a public university, the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). I had gone to private schools, Hampshire College and The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. My students at UIC are mostly commuters, unlike the students at the schools that I attended, who came from all parts of the North American hemisphere and beyond. I have learned the most about Chicago’s multiple identities from my students. Chicago is not just one definitive place or one cultural environment. The art scene here can be small, but it seems to be ever changing. And I have a great studio. I am very much a studio artist, so, wherever I go, I need a studio space to continue working. Tell me a little about the process of creating a new work. What inspires you to begin an artwork? Do you sketch out your ideas with a drawing first? Do you ever work a composition out on a computer before you begin to create your piece? I see much of what I do as drawing—in my use of thread and other kinds of linear elements, but also in my activation of materials in a combinatory way. That is, I see my works, the so-called end results, as splintering off from acts of drawing, even when there are no preliminary drawings to speak of. Having said that, sometimes I have an idea for years and it takes me that long to figure out how I want to execute it. This applies mainly to how I make my sewn artist’s books. For example, in the book The Waves, I remember reading years ago that in her novel of that name, Virginia Woolf wanted to explore rhythm rather than plot. That search for rhythm without plot in the foreground fully resonates with my thoughts on the structure of the book form itself. I see the structure of the book as a site

where movement yields to movement from one pair of pages to another. This produces a rhythm that may be altered according to the placement of elements—textual or otherwise—in the pages. What interests me is the conceivable emergence of movement through structure. It is like moving through architecture, but at another scale. To answer your question in a more general sense, at the inception of a project, I engage directly with manual processes to generate structures and images. I begin by attending to concrete material properties and potentials; like I said, the filaments of thread, but also the strangely brittle robustness of plaster, or the lustrous shimmer of graphite. These properties are amplified in the dynamic tension of the results: I reconfigure and combine materials, and arrive at resolutions for which there is no prior blueprint or drawing. My process relies on both gained proficiency and spontaneous exploration, and it unfolds within the context of the studio. Like I said, for me the studio is a laboratory where I experiment and discover the multivalent possibilities of making art. Over time, I have come to realize that one of the reasons I make things by hand is to participate formally and critically in the voluptuousness of the materially proximate world. I use the word “voluptuousness” here in the sprit of Mario Rossi’s philosophical proposal: the great interests of man: air and light, the joy of having a body, the voluptuousness of looking. Have you always explored time, death, space, clouds and weather, and ontology as subjects in your work? Does incorporating and working through such heavy themes and questions about the universe in your work help you to feel more at ease in daily life? Philosophical questions concerning the nature of reality and how we attempt to make sense of it are at the thematic core of my research. I believe that I am in good company, for these themes have concerned poets, theologians, skeptics, scientists, and artists for millennia.

Dianna Frid


What factors into the process of selecting materials, size, and subject matter for a specific piece, since you work in so many mediums— sculpture, site-specific installation, collage, works on paper, painting, drawing, book arts, sewing? So much of my work amounts to the acknowledgement of materiality. Given that our humanity is manifested within a tangibly physical world, my research starts from the perspective of the material properties of this world. In my work, not only materials but also spaces are catalysts that, when activated, alert us to their physical presence and properties, to their—and our—phenomenological potentials. I suppose that I want to remain alert to such potentials, and thus to provoke self-reflectivity in relation to the sensuous, material world. As you point out, scales shift dramatically in my work, from the intimate scale of the hand-held book to site-specific architectural installations that can be entered. Each of these scales—and everything in between—does something different perceptually, materially, in relation to our subjectivity and our bodies.

Untitled #4 (Refraction of Bolts), detail, 7 feet x 24 inches x 30 inches, Cardboard, wood, cloth, plaster, plastic paint and ink, paper, acr ylic, wax, rubber and, papier-mache, From the series The Vertical Shadows, 2008.

Template #2 for The Forces that Shape Them, 9 x 15 inches, Cloth, adhesives, metal, graphite, 2009.

I do not categorize these themes as heavy or, for that matter, optimistic. Ontological questions are as perennial as questions about the origin of the universe and the relative brevity of human life in relation to geological time. I see these themes as factual and at the same time mysterious. My works are not illustrations of these themes. Instead, they are explorations into the nature of how these themes are given form. For example, on the one hand, there are the clouds in the sky. On the other

hand, the clouds are part of a classification system created by human beings: the clouds are named and subsequently understood by these names. The themes of inscription (naming) and description of phenomena are part of what I explore. But I do not perceive them emotionally as heavy or light, scary or consoling. Having said that, all this might look emotionally different if, like in Lars von Trier’s film Melancholia, a planet was about to crash into the Earth and annihilate us.

You frequently work with materials which are associated with craft making and children’s art, such as colored construction paper, papier-mache, and cardboard. These materials are mostly thought of as ephemeral and flimsy but they can also be fragile and quite beautiful. Is there a particular reason why you began incorporating these materials into your work, what draws you to them? Do you like to use “throw-away” materials to contrast/counterbalance the very large themes which you are addressing in the work you are creating? I do not think of materials hierarchically and this is how I want my work to be positioned: sensuously but also politically. There is an assumption that we all see materials on a shared or unquestioned hierarchical scale. What is throw-away for someone may be generative in a very sophisticated way for me, or vice versa. There are many historical precedents for this. One important example can be found in the work of the artists who constituted the Arte Povera movement (not to mention the artists who influenced that movement such as Lucio Fontana and Antoni Tapies). Each of the Arte Povera artists is very different from the next, but they shared a clarity about eliminating material hierarchies. This was radical in the 1960’s, but it is curious that the question of hierarchy still pops up—I infer from this that the question is unresolved. There is so much noisy bling in art today that gets championed. Think of Damien Hirst’s diamond skull and there you have it: spectacle. In addition to Arte Povera, I am drawn to offcenter lineages of textile design and cloth. The question of craft is tangled up with questions of hierarchy, but also of categorization, of value, of labor, of functionality, of gender, and of tradition. This is why I find the general question irrelevant to my work: I make sculptures and drawings and books that do not, for instance, deal thematically with questions of gender


Page 4 left: Let Us First Deal With Air, 12 x 9 inches, Mixed media on paper, From the series Engines of Weather, 2008; middle: Dislocation of Snow, 12 x 9 inches, Mixed media on paper, From the series Engines of Weather, 2008; right:, Sometimes Gather, Sometimes Disperse, and Sometimes Remain Motionless, 12 x 9 inches, Mixed media on paper, From the series Engines of Weather, 2008.

or tradition. I do not make craft wares, even though much of what I make is the result of honing and un-honing what I know technically and manually vis-à-vis what I find intellectually stimulating. My work challenges any position that addresses the aesthetic dimension of art as superfluous. It is odd to me that intelligent people would think that the intellectual and the sensual are extricable from each other, as if work that gives pleasure and joy cannot also be smart and analytical. Do you feel that by using the materials associated with children’s artmaking that you are creating a ‘world of wonder’ as you may have when younger (while playing with art materials)—during a time when you were more innocent and less knowledgeable about the ways of the world? I do not see my work as naïve or childlike. I do not think that any given materials belong to children or adults in general. Thought, analysis, the honing of skills, the deployment of materials to tackle complex ideas—these are all part of my long-term project and they did not emerge spontaneously out of thin air. The spontaneity you see in my work is honed. Besides, I do not think children are necessarily “innocent.” My work arrives at resolutions in very particular ways from project to project. I may not always know what I am doing, but this does not mean that I am “child-like” or an ingénue. Could you tell us a bit about the Vertical Shadows and Engines of Weather installation? What are these sculptural objects that populate the installation? Are they meant to represent architecture and/or phenomena related to the weather or both? Could you tell us a bit about the pieces Untitled #4 (Refraction of Bolts) and Untitled #2 (Cumulonimbus) specifically?

The Vertical Shadows sculptures and The Engines of Weather 2-D collages are two related bodies of work that I first exhibited in 2008. I started to make the sculptures in 2006 after I got my current job teaching sculpture at the University of Illinois at Chicago. I started to make the Vertical Shadows for many reasons but I confess that an important one had to do with the fact that if I was going to teach sculpture, I wanted to use my studio practice to revisit making sculpture in the most physical and in-the-round sense. For a while I had been looking at Brancusi’s use of the base. I was intrigued by the fact that sometimes it took him many years to pair up a constructed pediment with a particular cast or carving. He did this formally but also strategically as a separate but related way to control—to whatever extent—the framing of his smaller, materially finer, abstract figurations. One might think that my looking at Brancusi was a retro move, not only after the prevalence of the Duchampian ready-made that has become so ubiquitous, but also after all the critically challenging work from the 60s and 70s that broke away from earlier conventions of sculpture and situated art in the expanded field. I intuited that I needed to move nonlinearly and interpretively towards Brancusi’s base. In retrospect I recognize that I wanted to think about the intersection of sculpture, pattern, architecture (think of mosaics and tiles), the miniature model, abstraction and representation. The Vertical Shadows became my vehicles for these multiple explorations. But before I had articulated all these things out loud, I simply started to make the bases with no sense of what they would, so to speak, support. I started to make shapes from geometrical solids (such as cubes and octahedrons), and these became the foundation for the stacked shapes that were to become the Vertical Shadows.

While I worked on these in a thematically open way, I was reading a book about the history of how clouds got their names. I have been interested in nomenclature and onomastics (the field of linguistics that looks at how places get their names) and I had already explored the subject of naming in earlier works (The Field from 2003; and the artist’s book The Ascents from 2001). Reading about how the clouds got their current names influenced the way the content of the pieces took form. Before 1803 it was commonly believed that there were hundreds of types of clouds. That year, the English amateur meteorologist Luke Howard published On the Modification of Clouds, which used a Latin taxonomy to establish three principal categories of clouds: cumulus, stratus and cirrus; and two subcategories: cirrostratus and stratocumulus. Nimbus was added later, to describe the potential of precipitation. In any case, I started to make the bases first and the subject matter for the sculptures came later. I made a lot of horrible pieces that I threw away until I began to arrive at the overarching structure for the project. By the time I got to work on #4, The Refraction of Bolts, the cloud-like forms had moved downward into the edges of the base, and the bolts occupied the top. It is a sign that the subject of the work was decentralized, that the “what is the work about” question became less important and hopefully less over-determined. For the Vertical Shadows I used materials, colors and patterns as a way to connect or relate the stacked volumes to each other, while still maintaining their modularity. It is not as if I was trying to use every color I could. I was trying to establish connections at the edges of each pattern and shape. I understood this from looking at how textiles and tiles are used in costuming and in architecture. Patterns complement each other, sometimes acting


to create the illusion of volume, sometimes to generate sensual pleasure through a reiteration of form, sometimes by creating provocative clashes and disjunctions. Building sculptures can take me a long time. I often have to plan aspects of a given work, for example its proportions, quite methodically. Or I must wait for plaster to dry. Or build something slowly only to find out that it fails and has to be re-built. The Engines of Weather are small works on paper that were rapid antidotes to the slowness of the sculptures. I had materials around the studio (like pieces of painted paper and sheets of metal with adhesives) and I began to make small two-dimensional diagrammatic abstractions with them. At times I would paint over an intricate pattern completely and start again, but I would leave a trace of the buried layer underneath. At other times the pieces seemed to happen spontaneously. I was fully submerged in making the two bodies of work simultaneously, so they clearly inflected each other. However, I approached the titling of the works quite differently. The titles of the sculptures are more or less descriptive of what you see. The titles of the Engines of Weather are evocations of the phenomena of weather and how it is described meteorologically. As someone who has studied how things and places get their names, I am definitely invested and implicated in the naming process through the titling of my works. Are you attempting to make sense of the repetition of forms in the physical world with the patterns you create in your artwork? Do the patterns correlate to any theories or ideas about what makes up the universe (molecules, elementary particles, etc...)?

We can address pattern from so many perspectives. There is the optical perspective, of course. Others have interpreted my work as a reflection of the patterns that occur in natural phenomena. But there is another way of addressing pattern. Pattern can be an index of a thought as well as of a manual process. Lately I have been reassessing the series of actions that I repeat again and again in the making of my work. These actions can be quite monotonous and boring. But after crossing a certain threshold of boredom I find that on the other side repetitive actions become trance-inducing. Embroidering, cutting, stacking, sanding, all of these repeated types of action can, at the best of moments, make time disappear or stretch. While making the work I have become interested in the possibility of getting to a place through the process where the “self” can get lost. It doesn’t happen all the time, but when it happens sometimes I can look at the work with some detachment and see with a clarity that I could not have anticipated or planned. Text shows up frequently in your work, especially in your artist’s books. Have you had any graphic design or typography training? How do stories, or fragments of text, from popular media (such as a line from an obituary, a line from a classic work of literature or poem, a word from a dictionary, a touching newspaper story) make its way into one of your works? I did not have any formal graphic design training but early on I looked closely at how books are designed. The book is the perfect technology. I don’t think anything can be done to improve it, but much can be done within the parameters of its structure. Text and language

unfold visually and/or temporally in a sequential way. In a book you can move backwards and in non-linear ways to disrupt or evade a sequence, while acknowledging that it is there at all times, in a physically tangible sense. I am drawn to how books make me self-aware of language’s materiality. The materiality of language is part of what I try to address in several of my artist’s books. The translation from one type of materiality to another is also part of what I think about when I use words taken from a page and then give them visual and conceptual import in a newly translated form. In the instances where I use words from, say, the Odyssey, my work merges appropriation and ekphrasis. You have been producing books since 1999. How many have you made? What are a couple of your favorites and what do you like about these books in particular? Could you discuss what The Artery Archives entail? I began to make books circa 1992, as a way to give enduring form to ephemeral works that had been documented photographically. These included interviews and performance works that I did collaboratively when, for a very short spell of time, I lived in Oaxaca, Mexico in the early 1990s. I came up with the name Artery Archives at around that time. I cannot remember why I chose that name…something about the alliteration perhaps, in addition to the expansive meaning of the concept of an archive: where one book is only a part of a collective organism. To this date I think of my books as one larger work. When I moved to New York in 1995 (I lived in NY for little over four years) I did not have a studio space at first and making sewn sculptures—this is how I thought of the books—was a way of addressing


Page views from The Comets, Canvas, cloth, embroider y floss, aluminum, adhesives, paper, acr ylic paint, Unique Book, 2011, Closed 11.25 x 6 inches; Open 11.25 x 11.75 inches.

topics of whatever magnitude at a small and intimate scale. I continue to make the books today, sometimes in bouts, sometimes with large pauses between one book and the next. What artists would you cite as influences? Are there any modern abstract painters that you admire? What type of visual art are you most drawn to? I gravitate to the work of various artists, and am, if anything, drawn with even greater intensity to the work of writers. My experience reading and re-reading the books of Clarice Lispector remains an important point of reference and orientation. I am self-conscious that I am reading Lispector in translation (from Portuguese to English or Spanish) and such “reading-in-translation” is in itself also a valuable point of reference. As I said earlier, some of the Arte Povera artists remain important to me: Alighiero Boetti and Giuseppe Penone in particular. I was really interested in what Catherine de Zegher was doing curatorially at the Drawing Center, and her show “3 x Abstraction: New Methods of Drawing, Hilma af Klint, Emma Kunz, Agnes Martin” was a revelation. So was her co-curated show “On Line” at MOMA from 2009. As far as contemporary artists, lately I have been looking at Serjei Jensen’s fabric paintings, at Phyllida Barlow’s and Karla Black’s sculptures and at Sheila Hicks’ tiny weavings. Tell us a bit about your residency at The Wall House 2 Foundation in Groningen, Netherlands? I spent a few weeks at the Wall House this summer to begin to imagine a project for the summer of 2013. The Wall House Foundation project, which is titled The Inside from the Inside, is a response to the architecture of the

late John Hejduk, who designed the Wall House # 2 in 1972. Of the many theoretical houses that Hejduk designed, the Wall House # 2 is one of the few ever built (it was completed posthumously in 2001). Hejduk, who was also a poet and a draftsman, was deeply engaged with language and drawing as foundations for envisioning buildings. The Wall House generates questions about the relationship between drawing, poetic symbolism and what a dwelling can be; it also prompts me to address the connections between Hejduk’s imaginative conception of the house and the signals he left in it to encourage us to perceive space in mysterious ways. At the center of my project is a large graphite wall installation. This three-floor drawing will act as an interior connective tissue between vertically stacked rooms. The rooms are only accessible by crossing a threshold marked by the wall that gives the building its name, and by ascending or descending a staircase. My exhibition will be an intervention that models a different kind of link between “insides.” The artist’s books play an important role in conveying this interiority. Artist’s books, in their modest scale, can temporally “ingest” a person (I am borrowing the figurative use of ingestion from Hejduk). The traversal of an artist’s book is a sequential traversal of spaces. Like rooms in a building, the traversal of the book’s space is given meaning by the manner in which a sequence generates content. Although I have made projects for architecture before—notably skylight and spectra for the 400 square meter atrium of the Neues Kunstforum in Cologne—The Inside from the Inside marks the first time that I will respond to a considerable architectural landmark. On the one hand, this is a rare opportunity to showcase a firmly

researched and materially poetic dialogue with John Hejduk’s legacy. On the other hand, it will be a pivotal work that will allow me to join together facets of my practice—artist’s books, drawing, poetry and installation—within one unified site. What are your future plans. Do you have any shows coming up in Chicago, New York or beyond? Depending on funding the project at the Wall House may become large and involve other artists in an inter-disciplinary sense, so this is where most of my outward energies have been focused. However, I have started new work in the studio (some large drawings and smaller sculptures). While nothing is scheduled, I have been lucky that there is ongoing interest in showing my work both here and in New York in the near future. I do not like to repeat myself again and again, and this is why having a lot of time between exhibitions can be not only convenient but, above all, creatively important. This summer I will be making some new lithographs with Bud Shark, a master printer who has a studio outside of Lyons in Colorado. I have worked with Bud Shark before and have had one of my most satisfying collaborative experiences as an artist doing that. Before I worked with him I told him that I knew nothing about printmaking in general and lithography in particular; he told me that this is why he was interested in working with me. What could you imagine doing if you did not create art? Horticulture. Or being a social worker. I suppose that being an art educator at a public university like UIC already in a sense involves aspects of both.


TK

Untitled, 13 1/2 ”x 10 1/2”, acrylic on book page mounted flat on panel


ART Q and A with NATHAN WASSERBAUER

Your work has changed in the last few years, and you’ve recently completed a new body of work. Was this change a deliberate move or more of a gradual evolution? Sort of both. For the past few years, I’ve been moving away from what I consider to be more traditional and prescribed ways of making things. I started off as an abstract painter and I think I just got tired of the conversations and assumptions of the medium. It all seemed very limiting to me and I made a decision to open up my studio practice as much as possible, to allow for a variety of mediums and working methods. Exploring different facets of an idea through different mediums is important, to try to bring ideas that exist in the studio into the real world as much as possible. There is a sense of absence in your work, with visual clues or remnants of that which had been. Works officially “Untitled” also record in parenthesis the person or event that was formerly represented on the page. How significant is this to reading, or reacting to the work? The idea of trace, or remnant has been a constant in my work, both in materials and content. In talking about the effect of a thing, rather than the thing itself, there’s a greater capacity for poetry and an organic meaning to occur, rather than a didactic, sort of one-to-one logic. The pieces in which I’m manipulating posters of cultural heroes, the figure is generally obscured by brushstrokes and paint splatter. The brushstroke in these pieces represents an almost meaningless, unconscious action. An aggregate of these actions make up a painting that has a specific hierarchy and purpose but taken on it’s own, it becomes more of a void or an accident, a remainder of another, purposeful action. I’m cutting the brushstroke into the paper and this removal of the photographic layer of the poster creates another level of meaning for me. The finished piece has no actual paint, just the memory of that thing, documented. I’m interested in the relationship between this calcified mark making and the intellectual and emotional capacity of the figure; the point at which a poster ceases to be, say, Muhammad Ali and the physical reality of the material takes

over. I’ve thought a lot about Rauschenberg’s Erased DeKooning: at a certain point, that piece ceases to be about erasure as eliminating previous meaning and becomes a unique piece created by positive, assertive mark-making. How are the materials chosen for these new works? Talk a little bit about the addition of color, which I believe is a choice you made over time, correct? I’m using mostly quotidian materials right now, book pages and posters. These things have a transitory quality physically, they’re almost non-objects. They do however carry a huge conceptual and emotional capacity. I’m intrigued by the space between the physical reality of a thing and the intellectual or emotional capacity that thing has the potential to evoke. A poster, for example, is a carrier of identity, politics, culture, etc. but the physical fact of that thing is that it’s a frail piece of paper that’s cheaply produced and disseminated. Color often exists for me in a pretty organic way. There’s a drive that I have in the studio that is largely conceptual but I have an equal ambition to make something that is visually compelling and color often fits into the latter category. Things gain meaning if they’ve hung around the studio long enough and I’ve learned to trust that impulse, even if I can’t really put my finger on why it’s there yet. You exhibited a work last summer called Alone: Two Views in 113 Parts. The installation is visually linear in much the same way software film and music editing appears on screen. Is this a direct influence of your work in film? I think it probably is, though that didn’t occur to me until much later. That piece was partially influenced by wall friezes done by Felix Gonzalez-Torres and the way that work was unique to the architecture in which it existed. I liked the idea that the viewer would be physically committed to the piece, that they would have to walk from one end to the other to get the full meaning (it’s about 90 feet long). The text in the piece is essentially linear; it can be read from left to right but aside from the text, there are other layers of meaning that occur. I wanted to confound that linearity by gradually making the

text unreadable and creating a context where one would have to refer to the middle, beginning or get a total view to get a richer idea of the piece. Talk about the choice in this piece of merging the Columbine killers handwriting with a poem by Edgar Allen Poe. This piece has changed over time and it’s meaning has shifted a bit for me. I began the piece thinking about visual shorthands, culturally held assumptions about inherited knowledge from books and photography. The piece is comprised of 113, cut book pages. The pages are idealized photographs of nature, beginning with very close, first person perspective to distant galaxies. These images are practically authorless and begin to take on a larger, cultural meaning of formless notions, like say, god or transcendence. Galaxies for example, as depicted in print, don’t have much relation to how those things really exist and they start to take on broader, mythical meanings. I think there’s a certain violence in that piece having to do with futility and disaffection. The poem, Alone, isn’t the most subtle poem in the world and there’s an almost desperate nature to it. I wanted to imprint the text with personal meaning, using the handwriting of someone who was involved in an act that was largely based on ideas of loneliness and disaffection. Ultimately, I think there’s an implication in the piece that as the imagery expands outward, the text expands inward at the same velocity. Horror in film has had a large influence on your work and fear seems to be an element you explore in both your studio work and your films. Part of the rush of watching horror films is confronting that base fear, that point of confrontation. Is this how you view the art making process, or your practice in particular? Or both? My love of horror films goes back to my childhood. I watched films that I was probably too young to see at the time and some of these films, like The Exorcist and John Carpenter’s version of The Thing (among many others) left a serious impression on me. This interest definitely influences my studio practice, but in indirect ways, I think. I’m attracted to a certain idea of fear, in the way that experiencing

Aaron Williams



Left: Untitled (Alps), 13” x 9 1/8”, acrylic on book page mounted flat on panel; right: Untitled, 12 ”x 9 1/2”, acrylic on book page mounted flat on panel


ART and that became interesting to me, as these are two equal creative impulses for me in the studio. The piece begins with images of Frank Auerbach, (for me, the epitome of painterly logic) and progresses through images of futuristic optimism and destruction which are depicted in floating cities and homemade bombs. There’s a homemade atom bomb near the end. The other part of the piece is a long tracking shot of all of the detritus from my studio. It’s a row of remnants of materials that were used to build art pieces: scrap wood, plexiglas, paint, things like that. Negative spaces. I wanted to take these negative spaces and make something from them, to prioritize them. The final shot is of two of these scraps, one on top of the other, signifying the most rudimentary form of creative impulse. It’s the moment when nothing becomes something, the beginning of the studio process. I’m interested to hear your thoughts on the filmmakers you’ve edited into your work, as well as how you selected the music. The clips that I use in my video pieces are chosen largely for narrative reasons, although I do have a great love for Tarkovsky and his films figure pretty highly in some of my pieces. I’ve used clips from his films and I’ve borrowed certain themes from his work. For the piece we just discussed, the long tracking shot was based on a scene from the film Stalker in which he depicts an array of culturally important objects underneath water. The turning of pages in art books turns up in a few of his films as well. The music in my videos is chosen for a couple of reasons. Again, I’m appropriating Tarkovsky, who utilized baroque pieces in his films. My other motivation for choosing particular pieces is that I find video to be a difficult medium as far as audience is concerned. Asking six or seven minutes of someone’s time in a gallery setting is a lot to expect and I wanted to use pieces of music that have an emotional pull, something that would make the viewer stay for more than a few seconds to watch the entirety of the piece unfold.

Top: Untitled (Ali 2), 24”x36”, cut poster and transparent paint; bottom: Alone, Two Opposing Views in 133 Parts (detail), installation at the Portland ICA

something new can evoke fear. Also, creating things in the studio can carry with it a certain violence. Destruction and death have always been important parts of my process. I try to have the courage to be able to destroy something in order to build it better. In your film A Man Born Blind Who is Being Told About a Rainbow, you flip through pages of books to show specific artists. Why did you

choose these artists? Describe the connection to the footage from your studio. Most of my pieces start off pretty organically and that part began as a sort of curated show of artists that I own books of. I just started taking these books off my shelves and photographing certain images, editing them down until I got to what I thought was a somewhat coherent group. As it progressed, I noticed that there was a theme of creation and destruction developing

How much of your 3D work is constructed for film only? How much makes to the point of sculpture and installation? So far, all for the constructs in my videos is for specific, film use only. Of course, connections exist between pieces so something that’s used for a film might turn up in another form in the studio at some point. Since you’ve undertaken these new concepts in your practice, what conclusions have you drawn? Or are you not at a point of conclusion, but rather in the middle, or even just beginning? A lot of it has to do with trust. I’ve had to learn to re-format my studio practice and trust that there would be something of value at the other end. As far as where I am, I always feel like i’m just about at the beginning.


Untitled (Miles), 33�x24�, cut poster with transparent (orange) paint, 2011


continued

Both images this page: Geert Goiris, Whiteout, looped slide projection with 49 slides, 2009-2011, dimensions vary according to space.

Continued from page 19, Geert Goiris to all, has proved too optimistic, the gesture these objects present is something that I would like to honor. Without wanting to be nostalgic, there seemed to be a window that enabled for big and generous thinking, this I value. There was a belief in transcending the limitations of the epoch, and a positive projection into the future. Many people now see this as hopelessly naive, but my feeling is that a sceptic or cynical outlook isn’t very constructive either. My intention is not to present them as failures of ideas, but as modern ruins, the embodiment of a past way of looking into the future. Even as they might be chronological remote, I think we can still connect to the bold spirit of progress. The photograph of the Futuro has different layers for me. About ten years ago, Phaidon published a book called The Sixties, which focused on the design, architecture and fashion of that era. I looked through it and came upon a photo of the Futuro. Immediately when I saw this image, I remembered that I have seen that exact same photograph in a magazine when I was about 10-11 years old. My spontaneous reaction was: I wonder if it is still there? After some time I visited a friend in Finland, so I asked around and located the Futuro. We went on a search together and managed to find the plastic pavilion just before it got dark. The whole trip was like an adventure little boys have. On the other hand, when I show this photograph, everybody goes: “oh yes, a UFO”. Even though very few people would claim they ever saw a flying saucer, it has entered our language and conciousness through popular media. I am interested in how knowledge and awareness is shaped and mediated through fiction in cinema, TV, graphic novels and other sources. When I was young, television was a major input. Literature and music came later. So in a way this photograph is also a retracing and revisiting of images that were important for me then. It is an endless loop: set designers develop models being used in cinema, SciFi authors have draftsmen compose space ships for their stories, a

Finnish architect takes this archetypical shape as the basis for his real 3D design for a transportable cabin. Then forty years later a photographer passes by and renders this object flat again. Could you tell me about the Liepaja image (from the Resonance series)? How did you come across this building? Do you know the history of the building? Is this a subject that you sought out or did you come to find this randomly? I stumbled upon it accidentally when I was traveling through Lithuania with a friend. The history was told to us by someone, but I haven’t verified it. It seems that this building was a bunker of the Red Army defending the port of Liepaja. When the Soviet Union collapsed, and Lithuania reclaimed its independence, it took a long time for all the troops to return to Russia. It was a painful episode: many Russians were assimilated and had build up close relations with Lithuanians over the years. A lot of families suddenly had to be relocated. When the Russian troops finally left the defense line to the Lithuanian army, the foundations of this bunker were dynamited, so it was severed from the land and it is slowly sinking into the sea. What is your preferred way to show your work? When your work is shown in a gallery how important is size, scale, and sequencing? The exhibition of my work is a specific situation where the parameters you describe are of utmost importance. I like very much to present the photographs in a dynamic tension with each other. The notion of images resonating, or different visual “force-fields” interfering with one another, is important in my approach to exhibition of my work. In every exhibition I try to include at least one new work that hasn’t been presented before. And I deal quite specific with the architectural space and the flow of the spectator through this space. When it is a solo show, I always build a scale model and play with different selections and setups for some weeks. It is equally important as the editing process of a book I guess, and I like it a lot. Thinking out an exhibition gives me a lot of pleasure. After that, the practical and logistic side

of organizing the works to be packed, shipped and installed is less stimulating. I don’t have a preferred way of showing. Some pieces have their own form (like Whiteout, which is an analogue two-projector loop), some images exist only as a large format wallpaper, claiming a more monumental presence within space. And still other photographs are presented in a more traditional way: framed Lambdaprints of about 100 x 125 cm. Where can we find your portfolio website? www.geertgoiris.info

Continued from page 34, Georg Parthen You mentioned to me that you are collaborating on a set of digital sketches about ideas of image construction with Christian Hellmich, who is also featured in the magazine this issue, could you tell me a bit more about this project? What prompted this discussion and exchange? Will you be showing the final outcome in a gallery setting? The exchange with Christian is an experimental dialogue. We send each other files and working instructions and collaborate on images in a way that each image goes back and forth between us several times until one of us decides that it is done. The initial motivation was a mutual interest in each other`s concepts of perceiving an image based on our rooting in different media. There is no intended final result and thus far it serves as a well of inspiration and basis for arguments and discussions. We exhibited one work in a group show in Munich but besides that we have no plans for exhibiting the work yet. Tell us what else you are working on now. Do you have any exhibitions coming up in the near future? For more than a year I have been working on a set of constructed still-life images and an accompanying publication, to be finished in the summer. Part of the Novae pictures will be shown in a group show in the Goethe-Institut in St. Petersburg in April and May. Where can we find your portfolio website? www.georgparthen.de


REFERENCE Photo credit: Morgan Lehman Gallery Amy Park, Gold Goldberg, Chicago, Watercolor on paper, 30” x 22”, 2011

Artist contacts Deedee Cheriel www.deedeecheriel.com

Christian Hellmich en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_Hellmich

Dianna Frid www.diannafrid.net

Laura Oldfield Park www./lauraoldfieldford.blogspot.com

Geert Goiris www.geertgoiris.info

Amy Park www.amypark.us

Georg Parthen www.georgparthen.de www.minkenundpalme.de Aaron Williams www.aaronswilliams.com


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