Identity, Burden, and Choice: The Daunting Transitions of Kathryn Hart

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Daunting Transitions

Kathryn Hart’s Daunting Transitions takes on a series of daunting topics with grace and a haunting resonance. Looking at identity, burden, and at the fear of and burden and responsibility of choice, the work is all about change in one form or another.  It is about gestation, and the poetry of life itself.

Hart’s work is often delicate here, lines and wires and bones and strands that remind the viewer of spider webs, of neurons and veins, of barbed wire, and the paths of stars.

Mysterious and magical, she explores a veritable cosmos of choice and interconnected moments; her works are sculptural weavings, metal curls and lines, fabric and fiber.

“Changing, morphing, redefining is part of being human,” Hart asserts. “The extent of my joy depends upon how much pain I’m willing to take.  I do not live life in the middle. These artworks are about moving forward.  I was a pioneer moving into new territory for me.”

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The solo show was shown at Kotlownia Galeria, Politechnika Krakowska, Krakow, Poland from September 17- October 17, 2018.  Organized and curated by Dr. Krystyna Malinowska and Basha Maryanska (awarded the Golden Owl for Visual Art in 2018),  the photos here offer a look at this absorbing body of work; work both contemplative and insightful.

The show was an outgrowth of what Hart describes as “An onslaught of happenings” that altered her life as she knew it at the time.  “My husband’s cancer, the deaths of both of my parents, and my own struggle with an ongoing disease and trauma… I was completely derailed, turned inside out. The underpinnings of my identity were shaken. In the aftermath of such continued upheaval, what comes next?” she asks.

For Hart, what came was a search for personal truth, love, connections, and growth. “I wanted to feel comfortable in my own skin again,” she attests. 

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Finding the core of her identity when the certainty in her life had slipped away on many fronts, resulted in the show’s creation. It presents a tension, both in terms of its materials and its art, a searching, which the artist describes as a verb, an action, and infinite. “Decision and choice are nouns, finite. The first is open-ended and reveals opportunities; the latter is a responsibility and creates boundaries.”

Women’s roles and a feminist aesthetic are a part of the exhibition as well. “I continued my dialogue on the multitude of roles females play and are expected to play.  We caretake, build and sustain a home life, clean up the mess of others  – emotional and physical; we engineer our lives to dovetail with our loved ones, and explore and create vast opportunities for ourselves,” Hart explains.  

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Thematically, her work was expressed through site-specific installations, ink drawings, wire sculptures, paper wall sculptures, mixed media paintings, and small assemblage sculptures, each unique. There were 78 artworks exhibited in all, created over a period of 4 years. All are abstract in nature, utilizing line, space, gesture, and the shadows they create as another element of form as well. 

“I examine the dichotomies of movement and stillness, contemplation and decision, space and line, and search and decision,” she says.

The muted grey, white, black, beige, and metallic color palette in each of her works here allows viewers to contemplate each image as a piece of the whole; its subdued quality belies its graceful, evocative, even ghostly shapes.

In past works, Hart has created denser surfaces, involving multiple layers, mixed media and burlap, glass objects, and found bone.

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Here, as with all her work, form follows content, she says. “These materials are airy, ethereal, and light…ripe for movement and growth.  There is ‘entity’ energy in both the 3D and 2D works. The work is organic and intended to connote the inner energy of an organism expanding and moving from internal forces, like an amoeba which can alter its shape and propel itself forward by extending and retracting pseudopods, or ‘false feet.’” 

Indeed, the light in which the works are exhibited forms an additional dimension to each piece. “The wire sculptures and their connecting shadows are the most direct and simple example. Found bones, usually deer, are incorporated into most of my work. In the wire sculptures, I only used rib bones. Ribs protect the heart and are elegant, graceful lines full of energy. Their shadows sweep along the wall almost of their own accord.”

As Hart recognizes, the shadows “continue to creep and move without the viewer present.” They add an element of something alive and shifting to the line and wire sculptures; and she postulates that the pieces may also add another dimension to her work. 

The sense that these works represent something universal, the human body, space and time, is hardly random. Her work here follows an artistic language that Hart calls “influenced by my doctor/scientific family whether I want it to be or not. I learned suture knots from my plastic-surgeon-father. His knots would both join and conceal. I use this language in my work as knots can be entanglements, junctures, bindings, obstacles, hurdles, gates, coupling and memories.  Some knots hold strong  – heal – while others can slide -conceal and yield.

“Making the installation of primarily lines and knots is a bit like making lace. Each individual part is necessary or it all can fall apart. It is both delicate and strong.  It is the sum of its parts, yet each line and knot are deliberately placed. Making it is a form of meditation. My mother was a microbiologist so my initial knowledge of and interest in microorganisms stem from her.”

She describes the spaces between the lines in the installation as places of rest and contemplation, aperatures, openings, portals. The lines themselves reveal potential paths ahead and scars of the ones just followed.”

“Line represents journey, connections, strength, simplicity, scars, tethers, choice, veins and channels.  Lines are also tangled emotions, truths, a web of stories. Lines tied together both lead towards and away from each other.”

There is nothing static about the work here; light and shadows alter their construct.

 

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Her paper sculptures, part of her “Making Space” collection were the first pieces she made. Titled with eliptical phrases such as “Parse;” “Toss or Place #1” or # 2, the works are shaped from crumpled, torn, handmade paper,  twisted and often turned inside out.  The titles refer to decided which memories to keep and which to let to go; the works are as delicate as precious memories, but need to be “set aside to make space for new memories,” Hart relates.

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“They remind me of writing different drafts or poems…the writer with crumpled pieces of paper littered across the floor. Discerning which have nuggets to preserve, and which should be tossed is necessary.”

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Her wire sculptures, the “Cellular Connection” works, represent for Hart a new beginning, starting with the most simple, single celled organisms.  “The shadows they produce are gorgeous, elegant and full of energy.” Hart views these sculptures as “drawings in space,” single-celled beginnings, an exoskeleton; energetic and sweeping shadow is used as form.

“Back and forth I would work on the installation and make the drawings, black and white ink on toned paper.  I think one fed the other. Both of these media are the most complex,” Hart says.

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There are 29 black and white ink drawings on toned paper here, meant to be seen both as a whole, and as a complete artwork individually. She compares them to the symbols of the Periodic Table, each with unique properties.  Their creation was time consuming, according to Hart. “Like a watercolor painting, there is no erasing.”

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According to Hart, “Each line is a choice which cannot be undone, yet the drawings must be meditative and freely done, almost without thought or they look stilted and constrained.  Each is lyrical and is intended to be a look inside an entity.”

Gallery View_Aspire and Toil and Side view of Parse, Toss or Place paper wall sculptures

Created specially for this exhibition was “Aspire and Toil.” Consisting of an ephemeral charcoal rubbing, double sided, sumi paper, charcoal and wax, the large scale piece was created on site in Krakow and inspired by the city itself.  

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“Krakow has never been bombed and exudes history from before the 300s. One side of the rubbing was made from stones of both the oldest gothic and the oldest renaissance church which sit side by side.  This side of the rubbing represents the hopefulness of and in humanity, the aspirations of the individual and hopefulness. The other side of the work, the ‘Toil’ side of the rubbing was made from the stones on the cobblestoned streets…the streets that citizens walked every day while they loved, protected and built their city and a society filled with artistic and scientific endeavors,” Hart states.

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 Also site specific, “Derailed,” is created of common place materials such as lines, wires, and embedded glass objects. Hart says it “Hints at the verve of figuration. The form is stretched taut and tattered by competing forces of the desire to move forward vs. indecision and the burden of choice. The entity is distended, pulled and propelled outward yet it is held constrained.”

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However Hart describes this work, it is deeply compelling, it is string theory and star path, ocean creature and harp strings. There is an electric energy to the piece. “The entity represents me. Indecision holds me static, while responsibilities and the need to move forward pull me in a multitude of directions.”

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That energy is pushed and pulled outward in a 3D configuration that represents growth, movement, and decision.  “There is a hint at a plumb line on each side of the diptych which both lifts up the false floor it has made and is rooted into it.  This ‘floor’ is torn pieces of handmade paper randomly laid on a metal mesh scaffold. The lines/veins coming outward from the installation suspend these floor pieces off of the ground underneath,” Hart points out. The pieces appear to be floating; air movement from viewers passing the work can shift the positions of the papers, causing some to fall to the floor in an unsettling impermanance.”  In this piece, too, shadows form an important role, tremulous veins that carry energy and nutrients.  Hart’s embedded glass lenses and ampoules fracture light and produce internal light within the form.

Altogether riven with light, shadow, line, and space, these Daunting Transitions  are spare in color and background, luminous and gorgeous, filled with emotion and contemplative energy; alive and shifting: their own organisms birthed by Hart.

  • Genie Davis; photos provided by the artist

 

Artist and Activist Mel Greet and Jeff Vespa’s Photographic Works Put the Spotlight on Gun Control

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Sculptural social realist Mel Greet presents a powerful and unique show, The Truth of Consequences, at the Bruce Lurie Gallery, opening February 9th. Green’s three-dimensional work is commanding, as he conceptually reshapes conventional objects to provide meaningful insight into social conditions.

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The familiarity of many images allows viewers to find and understand essential issues, while offering sometimes humorous takes on the world around us.

Paired with Greet at the Gallery are works by photographic artist Jeff Vespa, to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the seventeen students murdered at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb 14th last year in Parkland, Florida. Vespa offers 16 black and white portraits of the victim’s classmates along with a large screen video installation with testimonials created by Vespa. His work was originally featured in People Magazine and Buzz Feed.Wall Layout

Greet and The Bruce Lurie Gallery are donating part of the proceeds of two of his works “Going Shopping” and “New Math,” to the Brady Campaign. Greet hopes that the exhibition itself will serve as a focal point for politicians to recognize and act on sensible gun legislation.

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As to Greet’s work itself, his sculptural pieces utilizes a wide range of mixed media, from copper wire and textured plastic to the actual taxidermied skin of a snake. The artist’s involving textures help to shape his subject matter, and his sometimes whimsical take on modern life reflects the surrealism of Rene Magritte, the artist’s namesake. His goal is to create a connectivity with his viewers to engage them, encourage understanding, commitment, and action. 

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“Going Shopping” exposes just how easy buying an automatic weapon is — as easy as going to the grocery store for a carton of milk. If we haven’t recognized the horror of our bullet-riddled shopping sprees before, the artist demands we notice it now. This work uses a classic, discontinued grocery cart model as base, with bronze automatic weapons rise like a bristling bouquet inside the cart basket.

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“New Math” features a chalkboard as canvas, with  hash marks that eerily appear to represent attacks from or death by automatic weapon. The weapon itself is suspended in front of the board and hash marks, as if it were the chalk used to write this legacy of violence and destruction.

“Ultimately,” Greet says, “the question we all must ask is, how will we embrace the future collectively and individually?”

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Born and raised in Hollywood, Greet’s show biz experience as a child actor and film studio marketing executive informs his work, entraining and educating with visceral, vibrant images.  His media experiences have made him acutely aware of how imagery can impact society and shape communication about issues.

His inclusion of Vespa’s work in his gallery show began with an introduction to Vespa by Ross Misher of the Brady Campaign LA office, he explains.  “We all felt that it should accompany the sculptures, making the evening a much larger conversation, since it’ll be the 1 year anniversary of the Parkland shooting on Feb 14.”

Through Vespa’s contacts, Greet and the gallery enlisted TOMS brand clothing and shows, what he describes as a “giant push towards ending gun violence.” As a partner in the exhibition, TOMS will have iPads available for attendees to sign up to send postcards from TOMS.com as part of their End Gun Violence Together initiative. Each postcard urges merembers of Congress to take immediate action by passing legislation for universal background checks, which over 90% of all Americans support. TOMS is currently driving across the country to deliver 700k-plus postcards to Congress, and collect stories from  and voices of Americans affected by gun violences along the way. The volunteer-led postcard distribution to Representatives in Congress will be made February 12th.
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Greet asserts that “What I most want viewers to know about this exhibition, is what the title states: The Truth of Consequences. That there’s a consequence for complacency and I feel compelled to address certain issues: planet exploitation, drought conditions, old age, #me too movement, sensible guns laws, the rat race, an elevated level of hate, wage inequality, truth manipulated.” He notes that all too often “interacting with one another is distant and impersonal and only validated by social media.” He posits that our images of “how we see our own true selves in these times of fractured truths” is important and could be viewed as “half full or half empty.”
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The Truth of Consequences opens February 9th, and runs through February 28th.
Lurie Gallery 2736 S. La Cienega Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90034 https://www.luriegallery.com/
Genie Davis; Photos courtesy of artist.

A New Take on Opera from Juan J. Colomer Composer, Co-Founder of LA Grand Ensemble

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LA has a new opera in town – and a new take on a classic. Created by Juan J. Colomer, the composer is also the co-founder of the LA Grand Ensemble.

Dulcinea XL performed at the Colburn School in DTLA this week, is based on episodes of Don Quixote, according to Colomer. “It is based on the one in which Sancho, in order to cover his own lie, tries to make Quixote believe that an ugly and overweight peasant is the beautiful Dulcinea. Only this time, Quixote sees the reality, and thinks that he might be under a spell and that’s he can’t see her beauty. In the second act, a couple of Noblemen try to have fun at their expense, which includes Sancho having to pay for his lies.”

Colomer notes that while recently many classic operas or plays have been changed to a more recent time period to make the appeal more modern for a 21st century audience, that was not his choice.

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When I wrote this opera, I preferred to do something more subtle, and instead of extrapolating, just focus on a minor detail of the original book. By changing the focus to an idea that existed in the original but nobody cared about, we bring the attention to an issue that is absolutely relevant now. The fact that Dulcinea is extra-large resonates more with people now and is a reflection of the issues of this time.”

Colomer stresses that another issue is self-acceptance.

“Dulcinea is secure of herself and knows a fool when she sees one. She could easily be flattered that an apparent ‘knight’ fell for her and believe his lunacies, but she was grounded and knew who she was and that made her secure enough to make fun of Don Quixote. That could easily be extrapolated to Hollywood and how easy is for people to fell prey of ‘pseudo-producers’ that tell you how rich and famous they’ll make you, when it is clear from the beginning that their offices might be a mail box and and their cars wouldn’t pass the slightest inspection.”

Prescient and perfect for our time, the opera promises to be an exciting evening at the Colburn.

“In a sense, these classics have withstood the passage of time, and remain relevant because they talk about the human character, and that remains the same,” Colomer says.

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The L.A. Grand Ensemble is a flexible group composed of musicians mostly from the Los Angeles Opera and LA Philharmonic, according to Colomer. The group offers concerts with visual elements, lights, projections, dance, and costume design. He felt that an opera was a natural medium to explore all elements, and stresses that “All the visual aspects of the production are present and the audience can enjoy the musicians on stage instead of buried in the pit, which is also a part of the visual appeal, especially when they are some of the best musicians in Los Angeles.”

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The eclectic and original work features singers, Xavier Prado, Milena Gligiç, Melissa Treinkman, David Castillo, and Camila Lima, shown above.

“Costume designer Swinda Reichelt with her completely unique vision of the über famous characters, and the choreography of Lorin Johnson add another layer of humorous drama,” Colomer says. Dancers are Meg Murphy and Katelyn Sanchez.

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“We are also very excited to have a video animation and illustrations by the charismatic Sergio Arau that serve as set design. All of that under the baton of Maestro Ignazio Terrasi.” (above)

He adds “We are also very thankful that the Tourist Office of Spain has helped us bring this production to life.”

Looking ahead, Colomer says the LA Grand Ensemble has many projects to choose from. With Dulcinea Xl, however, he says  “Our main goal with is to serve as a presentation of the work, so that other people or organizations looking for new operas can see it and present it at different venues.”

Be one of the first to see this exciting production on Wednesday, January 30th at 8 p.m. at the Zipper Conert Hall, located at 200 S. Grand in downtown LA. Tickets are $30 to $50. For more information, visit: LA Grand Ensemble; tickets at: Eventbrite

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Devin Thor: Paleolitic Creatures Cut from Stone

 

50882500_10216427681391788_8757765507152609280_nWith several unique stone sculptures now on exhibit as part of MOAH’s powerful Peace on Earth, running at the Lancaster museum through April 21st, it’s a good time to take a look at Devin Thor’s powerful sculptural presence.

At MOAH, Thor presents three pieces from his Paleolithic Creatures stone works, raw, unique works that make extinct creatures live again as sculptures cut from sandstone. Both in their use of color: russet, gold, brown; and in their use of material, they appear as if they arose from the earth itself, creatures of a Southwestern world, of raw, open plains and red-rock wanderings.

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The artist’s use of material makes these flat works fascinating in texture as well as image. Seeming tribal in nature, their beautiful simplicity serve as an elegy to the losses of the past, and a pristine prayer for a better future. Thor is a geologist as well as an artist, which is in part the likely reason for his choice of material here. The rough brown surface creates an elegant but primal visual perspective, a tribute to the beings themselves, and the land on which they roamed. His minimal approach is wonderfully relatable; he has shaped easily recognizable, universal figures that open the world of the past with hope for tomorrow.

Thor says of his stone work that it is “an homage to our prehistoric ancestors, but also an exploration of the global influence of humans on our environment…” adding that “modern humans have modified the planet and now must take on a stewardship role, otherwise we might face the permanence of extinction ourselves.”

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Inspired in part by the cave paintings of Lascaux, Thor relates that he paints and sculpts using “the energy that flows from my emotional imagination. As a geologist, I explore the structure of the natural world with the logic of a scientist.”

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The works displayed at MOAH include the jewel eyed “Antelope Doe and Antelope Fawn II” as well as “Sentinel Bison II.” The former pieces incorporate vividly colored stained glass as their eyes, and stand on thin iron legs.

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The latter work has no crafted eye, yet the crags of the sandstone chosen to create his bison series hang as if they were fossilized fur, disguising the eye of the massive creatures.

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Some bison images Thor has created are grazing, or bent; some crafted from cast iron, others from different colors of rock.

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In each, there is a poignant reminder that despite the bulk, the weighty purpose of these beings, they were in the end too fragile to survive. They are a cautionary tale for preservation of other species, and our own.

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Thor also creates the more whimsical wood and found objects in his Gumby Goes series. These fanciful images are based on the Claymation character of Gumby, his magical adventures, and his iconic cultural status. Despite these green wooden works witty characteristics, Thor says they represent a darker side of human nature. With gauges as eyes, a gear ringing his mouth, and an alarmed expression, “Gumby Goes Borg X2” is a study of futuristic anxiety. “Gumby Goes Pinball,” which includes pinball machine parts, is brighter in color but no less fraught with a sense of anxious awareness of the human condition. We are perhaps all being played.

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Additional sculptural works include more abstract images, such as “Space Relic X01,” created using salvaged Sycamore wood, plywood, anodized aluminum, and stainless steel tubes. Again, Thor has managed to create a work both delicate and substantial, named for the space beyond us yet somehow representative of the planet on which we reside.

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Thor’s sculpture are indeed a sign of our times: of life on this planet, our collective past, and our equally bound future.