Convenience, repetition and
mass-production have become necessities due to an ever-expanding population and
fast paced lifestyles. Our throwaway
society relies on plastic water bottles and containers, aluminum cans,
cardboard boxes and excess packaging materials to keep things fast and
cheap. These items are consistently
encountered in our everyday surroundings and have become nearly invisible to
most eyes.
As a painter, I find
the experience of viewing this material within our environment as a sort of
urban formalism. Yet instead of using a paintbrush, the deconstructed element
of the detritus becomes my medium. I use
these cast-off materials like a mathematical and scientific form originating
from the natural world, with a sophisticated urban formalist language. Transforming it into a structure with an
expressive spatial growth pattern and evoking a nature/industrial-techno
continuum. This formulates interplay
between the visual properties supplied by the object (i.e. everyday
environmental materials) and the person observing it. An experience that the viewer often attempts
to distinguish between adequate and inadequate conceptions of reality.
The practice of
artistic truth, quite often my plot, is designed to be an accumulation of
mental and formal experiments. Not a
copy of what exists, but a portrayal of the typicality of our contemporary
society's cast-offs in either its developed or potential form. |