Geo-Structure
Exhibit Dates
Geo-Structure will be presented at Goucher College’s Silber Art Gallery in the Athenaeum from Tuesday, September 4, to Sunday, October 7, 2012. This exhibit, which is free and open to the public, can be viewed Tuesday through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Artist Reception
An artists' reception will be held Friday, September 21, from 6 to 9 p.m., with an artists' talk at 7 p.m. Call 410-337-6477 or visit www.goucher.edu/silber for more information..
About the Exhibit
The works by artists Jessica van Brakle, Ryan Browning, Mimi Frank, Magnolia Laurie, Bill Schmidt, Richard Vosseller, and Jowita Wyszomirska use repetition and architectural building blocks to comment on their surroundings and daily experiences.
Jessica van Brakle's work combines painting and drawing, mixing manmade structures with natural, organic elements to relate conflicting worlds that co-exist in one psychological space. Stripped down to a skeletal level, the intricate geometric lines of construction cranes become symbols of power, growth, and the possible "paved paradise" of the 20th century.
Ryan Browing uses painting to suggest space and the actions and decisions of its creator over time. Browning's paintings consider the nature of the contemporary landscape and how space and memories are felt in an increasingly layered, complex world. He draws from experiences and memories, both real and virtual, to generate the imagery in his works.
Mary Annella "Mimi" Frank uses the geometry of chairs to explore familial relationships. A chair can be a powerful metaphor, a connection between people and the positions they occupy. Frank's "constellation" of small welded steel chairs expands across space to illustrate the complexity of interpersonal connections.
Magnolia Laurie's paintings and installations show delicate and makeshift systems and structures that may not endure their own weight, let alone impending disruptions. Referencing modern architecture, nomadic cultures, and the nesting habits of bowerbirds, the works depict the instinctive, sometimes-manic act of building.
Bill Schmidt's roots as an artist are in traditional, observational painting. His works depict the sometimes-uneasy coexistence of the manmade and natural worlds. Schmidt prefers to begin each painting without a clear idea of the end product. His images - made from various combinations of gouache, ink, charcoal, and water-soluble crayons - encourage the viewer to make associations and arrive at a personal understanding that is likely to shift each time the work is considered.
Richard Vosseller often uses wood, sheetrock, and other residential construction materials for his sculptures, which he bases on the meter of poetry. In all of Vosseller's projects, he endeavors to solidify his thoughts on failure. His recent foray into three-dimensional scanning has provided a fertile proving ground for this idea.
Jowita Wyszomirska's site-specific wall drawings are dynamic arrays of geometry that navigate between random and chaotic. She employs a range of commonplace materials - masking tape, Tyvek, plastic, and wire - while hovering between two- and three-dimensional states. Intrigued by underlying cycles and ongoing changes in landscape where manmade and natural worlds intersect and override one another, her work reflects the web of complex relations.