Luis Flores (Baltimore, MD)

Luis Flores (Baltimore, MD)

September 2013

NUEVE/TRECE

The works selected for this mini-retrospective were produced by Flores over the last five years, a period of productivity marked by the numbers nine and thirteen, personal numbers he associates with chance or luck.  Most of the images and forms were inspired by recollections of brief observations of boxes, containers, jewelry, simple musical instruments or tools found during chance encounters in architectural spaces, old and new.  Studio sessions usually begin with a period of reflection or “look-backs” that help guide his hand in a series of improvisational moments.

Melissa McCutcheon (Washington, DC)

September 2013

We Are Living Here

Melissa McCutcheon is an oil painter originally from Seattle, Washington currently based in Washington, D.C. She received her Master of Fine Arts degree in Painting from Washington University in St. Louis.

Her paintings are an examination of the sense of identity associated with displacement and its relationship to one’s cultural and socio-political context. Each painting symbolizes her experience as an outsider traveling and living throughout developing nations in the Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia and Eastern Europe over the past 10 years. The relationships cultivated within these travels inspire the choice of figure in each painting. Concurrently, the figure functions as a metaphor; specifically changing within each painting to represent the different emotions associated with displacement; a member of a specific tribe and no tribe at all – a native of the dispossessed. Once the painting is completed, there is a sense of the figure being at one and at odds with its context; a feeling of displacement and belonging all at once.

Joan Belmar (Washington, DC)

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August 2013

Trans Lucid

For the past several years, Chilean artist Joan Belmar has been working with translucent materials. Belmar is interested in how pieces of translucent material are perceived differently according to their exposure to light and the angle from which they are viewed.

Separately, he wants to explore how the qualities of the individual object transform when that object becomes part of a group.

For this exhibition, the artist combines these two interests – he creates an organic installation that seeks to exploit the particular properties of the translucent plastic cup. Drawn to their capacity to both absorb and redirect light, he intends to examine how a massive grouping of this material will give the viewer different insights into the qualities of the plastic cup, material and otherwise.

Visit his website at jbelmar.tripod.com

Megan Crist, Jennifer DeAngelo, Piper Grosswendt, Jessica Hopkins, Zsófia Horváth, Jared Packard-Winkler, Jennifer Small, Mia Weiner

August 2013

2013 Young Contemporaries

Young Contemporaries presents disparate veils of perception from a generation reacting to the corporeal need for human connection in our fast-paced and detached digital domain. Whether simply looking through the shroud of a curtained window or looking from within numerous masks of personal identity, these nine artists offer layered filters of poetic sensibilities that address process, materiality, intimacy, identity, the passing of time, decay and death.

In Zsófia Horváth’s diptych Inside Out one can hear the poet Wendell Berry whispering both “Come to the window, look out, and see— and “Leave your windows and go out, people of the world—Say no to the Lords of War—” In this age of jihad, it is the inner work that is important. The seed of creativity is inside and the fruit is ripe.

Jennifer De Angelo’s Conception lushly illustrates the words of Rumi — “what happens to seeds inside their prisons will happen to us in our homes.” Because language cannot say it, we are offered a reason to paint.

Jane Remick presents a statement about the constructs of gender and race by examining where the photographer stands in a performance of photographing, projecting, re-photographing and projecting again. With over 1,000 known hate groups operating today in the United States, (a 67% increase from a decade ago according to the Southern Poverty Law Center) these images beg the viewer to question what is necessary to make a post-gender, post-racial society.

Mia Weiner creates delicate portraits by playing with the boundaries of technique and material. This is creation by a process of destruction. Using the devoré process (which means “devoured” in French), a chemical gel dissolves the cellulose fibers of the fabric. The artist feels that the effort to discern the white-on-white image is akin to the work required to recall certain memories.

Non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma has motivated Jessica Hopkins to formulate an aesthetic language to express her experience with the disease. This is a language that employs color as sanctuary; a mask that could represent a supernatural being, a device for protection. Stripes, drips, and abstracted forms offer a distortion of reality that place the self-portrait in the realm of the universal.

Jennifer Small is concerned with the passing of time. She starts off recording a journey through her day with a camera, narrowing panoramas into single frames that are later manipulated into compositions documenting blocks of time. Her abstractions offer shades that at once feel familiar yet freshly foreign. Once again the poet whispers “Come to the window, look out, and see —the valley turning green in remembrance—the leaves that are the work of all of time —”

With muscularity, Jared Packard-Winkler proves the relevant power of painting to skewer the proverbial sacred cow, appropriating magic all the way back to Willendorf.
Color applied like Matisse cut outs dance across Piper Grosswendt’s altered thrift store linens and echo the marks of Jennifer Small across the room. The linens bring the viewer into a vast, yet intimate space where dreams become maps and diagrams that chart the territory of pillow talk.

The jewel-like photographs of decay by Megan Crist bring to mind heat index maps depicting regions of global warming and melting ice caps, leaving us with the poet saying “go out, people—Say no to the Lords of War—Say no by saying yes—to the air, to the earth, to the trees, yes to the grasses, to the rivers, to the birds and the animals and every living thing.”

Stephanie J. Williams (Arlington, VA)

July 2013

Uncommon Bodies

Our senses are only capable of gathering bits and pieces of our surrounding environment. They then reformulate the information and assign context to form meaning. Instead of mechanical calculation, this process is designated by a playful gathering of fragmented information only to reorient for personal purposes.

Williams is interested in the process of reconstitution in which mundane experiences and scenes form potential oddity. The Anomaly Portrait series examines themes of body topography, play, home, and pose. The work tends to amalgamate the senses of the human form, taking something familiar and reconfiguring it into alien territory. Through a changed context, these disparate parts become fetish or exotic object allowing you to look at what is uncomfortable to see, to tie a cute bow around something grotesque and to have accessibility to anomaly. These works collect gaps in understanding and reorient in order to create myth. They extend a hand that provides context in which our bodies experience and understand the world around us.

Visit her website at www.stephaniejwilliams.com