Showing posts with label installation art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label installation art. Show all posts

7/19/17

Christopher Volpe and Judith Motzkin at Castle Hill Truro Center for the Arts

Chris and I installed our show yesterday and we are pleased with the way our works meet. Opening Reception is Thursday 4-6. Truro Center for the Arts @CastleHill
Chris is showing Westerlies, a series of seascapes in oil paints and tar. 




The pieces in my installation, Gather and Sort, are made of clay, vintage scientific slide boxes and digital images. Pot shards, an inevitable and often discarded product of making pots, are tumbled with sand and water into smooth round forms, imitating geologic processes of weathering and erosion. Assembled over years, they are presented here in various states of chaos and imposed order, making reference to the persistence of pottery in human and archeologic history and the scientific practices of taxonomic organization.


The work speaks to the way we select, gather and make order and use of that which is collected. A stone is placed for the dead, a cairn to mark direction, a “sekimori-ishi” at the entrance to a meditation space of solitude. Just as we share the impulse to pick out stones on the beach, we are impelled to touch these curious objects. Please do.

“A Taxonomy of Sorts” comes from this natural impulse and the action of sorting these objects in the studio, giving them context. The work “...plays with the conventions of taxonomic cataloguing and storage in the natural sciences.”  In the work they “look like they’ve been sorted according to some kind of taxonomic logic, but in fact, they have been sorted by a shifting, undependable logic that is neither chance – decisions are specific and particular – nor rigor.”



“Stone Flow” refers to archaeological time and the slow movement of material from the earth, through the hand of the potter and back to the earth. As more work is made, more pots are lost in process, and more shards are added to create new iterations of this long term project. 

11/18/15

ALT clay Hess Gallery Pine Manor College

ALTclay at the Hess Gallery, Pine Manor College, Newton.
Gallery talk Thursday 11.19.15 at 10:30 am. through 2.16.16
The show was reviewed in Artscope Magazine Jan/Feb 2016.
Pick up a copy or read it here: PDF
ALTclay press release image

installation image
Taxonomy of Sorts

5/9/14

flow-dry-crack-slake-reform Appearances 2014

My installation for Appearances 2014 in Provincetown is in process, with Time Lapse documentation from April 17-May 17. It was built to this point by me, now we are watching changes over time and weather.
photo of dune's edge installation in progress
detail

photo of dune's edge installation in progress
dune's edge installation in progress

10/8/13

EARTH effects Exhibition Opening

 
My work is included in this five person, international exhibit opening Thursday at the Nave Gallery in Somerville, MA. In addition to a clay installation called Earth Tones, pictured below, I have elected to show the first digital prints from 8 years of documenting the eroding dunes at the edge of earth and sea in the Cape Cod National Seashore in Wellfleet. For me this is about the persistence and constancy of change. Geologic morphology occurs on a time scale that makes it generally imperceptible to us, but here, at Newcomb Hollow, where the water and wind and tides undermine the fragile cliffs of clay and sand and stone, we can see it happen. It reminds me that we are but a grain of sand in time and space, waiting for a breath of wind to blow us to the next landing.
Fractal mystery comes of turning the image

January Calm/Low Tide
Sand Fall

Approach

  
Earth Tones, ceramic installation

4/23/12

Appearances in Provincetown

Now through April 29 at the Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center, Hudson Walker Gallery, as part of Appearances 2012.

4/21/11

Dis/Appear

Appearances Green Art Festival this week put on by the Provincetown Conservation Trust includes my ceramic and mixed media scape installation: Dis/Appear. These are the early photos.
The site, at the end of the world, is the tidal area and beach below the kayak landing near Pilgrim Landing and the P'town Inn. It was created last week and has been subject to a huge wind and rain storm on the weekend, a full moon high tide, and the daily ebb and flow. Some parts are now gone, some buried in sand or straw.





 







photos: Phyllis Ewen, Laura Smith, Judy Motzkin all rights reserved