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Excavations |
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Writes the artist: We are vast storehouses of sensory information. It is this information that I strive to present in a work of art. Consciously, a beginning may present itself as a color, a feeling, a word or phrase. Once the painting process is underway, my actions become less conscious and more intuitively physical. I respond to the surface of the paintings by layering, scratching, smoothing over, incising, covering or uncovering. This is a process that I think of as an ongoing excavation, a mining of a subterranean gallery. Texture is of primary importance. The surface is comprised of a build-up layers that recall fossils or old walls that have been affected by weather and years. The writing is made spontaneously and automatically, sometimes recalling a fleeting sensation. Most often the writing is meant to be indecipherable: that is because I am interested in the rhythm and look of writing as a physical trace, not its content. Making marks in this way reflects the way we ruminate. Thoughts come and go, repeating themselves as we dwell on an idea, a word, or a song. Some thoughts remain strong and insistent, while others fade away. Culling form in this manner is often a cycle of searching, discovering, and letting go; a mysterious uncovering that is a continual surprise. Susanne McDougall Carmack 2004 |
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