Artist’s Statement
When producing narrative work, I return to themes from history. This dialogue
can connect the viewer to the past and gives us validity as humans. Concepts
of purity, grace, pity and forgiveness, while less at the center of contemporary
art-making, have not vanished.
When the Church relinquished its role as patron, artists breathed in freedom
and began to exhale more self-concerned work. The Church had provided
focus, yet seemed restrictive. Artists assumed that freedom would nurture
creativity, but creativity is the manifestation of a problem solved. Absolute
freedom is the absence of problems, hence the lack of need to solve, discuss
and disagree through art.
This body of exhibited work came about as I thought on the condition of
being sacred. Is sacred space relevant in today’s society? Is one
really transfixed through sacred acts beyond one’s control? Does
God make things happen through a saint’s actions or is the saint
an intercessor to God? The saints that I have depicted possess no
power beyond themselves and simply live in a state of grace. This grace
allows the impossible to seem possible and the supernatural to seem common.
We all possess the ability to sway the world in a saintly way. The sentiments
expressed in this exhibition can be described as looking for the miraculous
in the mundane.
As a student, I was extremely influenced by an exhibition of the photographs
of Duane Michals, in particular his series of Christ in contemporary society.
The images had titles like “Christ eating cat food with a pensioner
in Brooklyn”. These images took the classical theme of “Christ’s
example” and framed it within a very modern context. I wrestle with
this dichotomy in the studio and hope to continue so for a long time.
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