Off the grid
June 7, 2007- July 14, 2007
Reception: June 7, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
511 W 25th St
“Through my drawings, I have developed these characters that I feel reflect our concerns, our fears, our worries and our brutality toward one another. I see the world as a dangerous place. However, I am seasoned enough to see the absurdity of it all. My cartoon characters represent the comedy and tragedy of humanity.” H.W.
The
Brenda Taylor Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of new paintings by
Heather Wilcoxon. In the past several years, the artist has been addressing the grave issues of war and global conflict within a seemingly benevolent abstracted comic book style. This so-called “lowbrow” world of comics masks the deep anxiety the artist experienced in the aftermath of September 11th. The dark and difficult issues of terrorism, war and death take form in crude and childlike iconography that attempts to bridge the rift between the abstract and the comic.
The storyline in conventional comics is developed through sequential vignettes. And although Wilcoxon’s characters are sometimes “serialized”, her paintings are far less concerned with telling a complete narrative than they are with an overall effect. The artist employs a wide variety of mediums and techniques to create a highly worked surface. Oil paint, resin, pencil, print transfers, collage and assemblage are often combined to dynamic effect. Wilcoxon is also an accomplished bookmaker. Her one of a kind books are intensely labored over and fetishized affairs. While there is a vague storyline within these books, the focus again is an overall aesthetic look. Rough-hewn in appearance, the books have the appearance of an eccentric family scrapbook.
The painting, Asleep at the Wheel, 2007, is dominated by a large mechanized orb with a leafless tree sprouting from one of many rivet-like knobs. A sickly turquoise-ringed sun, like an all-seeing eye looms in the sky. In the foreground, the figure of a man with eyes squinted shut is oblivious to a nearby imminent catastrophe, while a bug-eyed bunny (a frequent signifier in Wilcoxon’s work of nature in peril), surveys the scene. In the artist’s hands, the reference to a world out of balance is both disturbing and unnervingly comedic. Other works incorporate word balloons in stylized lettering, AK-47 assault rifles in day glow colors and organic blobs oozing green goo. Spontaneous caricature and cartooning are Wilcoxon’s investigative instruments for creating aesthetic and comic abstractions.
Lucas Natali,
Brenda Taylor Gallery, 2007
Heather Wilcoxon currently teaches at UC Berkley in San Francisco. She has taught painting and mono-printing at the San Francisco Art Institute, College of Marin California and The San Francisco Center for the Book. She has been in numerous exhibitions including The San Jose Institute for Contemporary Art, The Triton Museum of Art in Santa Clara and Rene di Rosa Preserve in Napa. She has been the recipient of a Pollock/Krasner Grant in 1999, two Marin Arts Council Grants as well as the Dierassi Artist in Residence Fellowship in Woodside California.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Brenda Taylor Gallery | | Address | 511 W 25th St, #401 New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-463-7166 | | Hours | Tue-Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5 | |
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