![]() | From Unseen at Roebling Hall. |
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| Unseen at Roebling Hall | May 4, 2007 | - | May 26, 2007 |
| Psychoideology: Spirituality, Politics and Identity in Search of a New Paradigm at Roebling Hall | Oct 19, 2006 | - | Nov 11, 2006 |
| Roebling Hall is pleased to present its new group exhibition, “Psychoideology: Spirituality, Politics and Identity in Search of a New Paradigm.” Featuring the work of some 13 artists, many of whom are entirely new to the gallery, “Psychoideology” exp... |
| Kysa Johnson website | Posted: 2007-07-25 |
look. look again. at The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum | Posted: 2007-03-06 |
What goes around comes around. This simple aphorism leads one into the complex
worldview at the heart of Kysa Johnson’s beautiful, provocative, and elegant work. Her blow up 79 is a landscape based on the nineteenth-century American painter George Innes’s painting of the Delaware River Water Gap. For Innes, like many of his peers, landscape painting was not merely about pictorial beauty, it was a vehicle to express the mystical and divine aspects of Nature, a way to celebrate the New World, and thereby a way to make truly American art. blow up 79 is also a picture of the molecular structure of the environmental pollutants propane, methane, acrolein, ethane, hexane, and benzene, all of which are present in the Delaware River area as we find it today. The link between these two views—one historical, one contemporary; one macro, one micro; one rooted in art history, one rooted in environmental history— is the patterning Johnson discerns in nature and art. Earlier paintings linked art-historical images of Immaculate Conception (think Mary begetting Jesus) with scientific examples of Immaculate Conception (think asexually reproducing yeast or asexually reproducing bacteria). The microscopic image of the latter was patterned to produce an image of the former. So with microscopic views of benzene does Johnson build an image of the Delaware. For Johnson, drawing has always been a means to explore our surroundings and to try to come to understand the world around us in a deeper way—scientifically, emotionally, and intellectually. In email correspondence with the author, she states, “my work has always been about patterns in nature.... the ‘landscapes’ of the microcosmic and macrocosmic.” It is this natural affinity to viewing nature, either through a microscope or a painting, which allows Johnson to see with her naked eye that which we often miss—the inherent complexity of our ecosystem. By this I mean more than just the complex natural phenomena at play in the Delaware River; also the psychological, cultural, and historical overlay which is part of the landscape. We create stories about nature and they inform our view of landscape. Nature creates stories about us in the landscape as well, written in methane and propane and there for the reading, if only you choose to look. What goes around comes around. Johnson’s large, site-specific wall drawing in the Leir Atrium is based on the microscopic view of the pollen from trees surrounding the Museum. Maybe you just inhaled some—God bless you! Harry Philbrick, Director | |
| Kysa Johnson at Roebling Hall | Posted: 2006-05-12 |
| Museum 52 | Posted: 2006-05-12 |
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