Lorna Mills and Sally McKay
Digital Media Tree this blog's archive OVVLvverk Lorna Mills: Artworks / Persona Volare / contact Sally McKay: GIFS / cv and contact |
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I have met Lisa Myers, one of the curators (with Suzanne Morrissette) for
Past Now: Works by Meryl McMaster and Luke Parnell — she's uber-smart,
and I think it's gonna be good. Opens on Thursday.
I once wrote this about Scott Carruthers:
Although Carruthers’s drawings are technically static, the effect of looking at them is immersive, disorienting, and dynamic. Carruthers makes us dizzy on purpose, intentionally creating a physical experience of vertigo for the viewer. Because the drawings literally fill up the room, and because each little frame has such potent narrative impact, we have to navigate them, as in a video game, charting our own path through the imagery. Unlike a video game, however, which usually follows a linear narrative, this experience is open-ended. No two people will make the same set of connections or link the images into the same story.Now he finally has a website! And it's got the best artist's statement ever. (The bio is pretty good too.)
Carruthers’s artwork is satisfying as pure entertainment and as social commentary, documenting the oppression, violence, despair, humiliation, and humour of our world in a recognizable way. The installation is also a physical experience, more interactive than most artworks, despite the fact that there are no moving parts. Conceptually, Carruthers’s mesh of potent, activated nodes is a model of the human brain itself.
Sandra Meigs - The Fold Heads at Susan Hobbs Gallery, 137 Tecumseth Street, Toronto, ON. Until March 20, 2010
Hey Yo and Luv Ya So 2009 acrylic on panel, mixed media, gobo light
Feelin’ Lo and Ever So 2009 acrylic on panel, mixed media, gobo light