Two
years ago, I contsructed a 1:87 scale model neighborhood, a fictitious
cluster of eleven houses depicted through model railroading miniatures,
styrofoam, cardboard, and plastic, complete with string telephone wires
and working lights. The process of designing and assembling the setting
over several months triggered my imagination to develop characters to
populate the place along with a loose timeline of events that would culminate
in the neighborhood’s history. I considered who lived in each home,
their family dramas, and the way their private lives might spill into
view of their neighbors. The model became a stage on which to develop
the psychological implications of belonging to a particular family, with
all of its dramas, struggles and familiar routines. I thought: this tree
will be taken down after an old man crashes into it; a father will transform
this lawn into an ice skating rink; this house will be abandoned after
its residents are scandalized on the evening news.
The paintings are glimpses of a scene or fragments of a narrative. Some
of the images are conceived of sequentially. While the images don’t
necessarily need to be “read” in order, I am interested in
storytelling over time through repeated depictions of the same house or
car or person, seasonal changes, and shifting vantage points. Like the
disturbing difficulty of trying to put rolls of film in order several
years after the pictures have been taken, I hope the collective images
suggest a known past that is just beyond reach. I intend for the tiny
scale to enhance an urge for more information. Similar to a memory, they
are fictional constructions of significant moments and distillations of
experience. One of my challenges is to invite the viewer to form his or
her own connection and narrative so that he may empathize with the occupants’
seemingly mundane existence.
Working with common themes such as transition, aging, isolation, and loss,
I am interested in the fragility of relationships and the awkwardness
of a group of people trying to coexist and relate to one another. As I
transitioned my model into winter, snowbanks of increasing depth seemed
to fortify a sense of isolation and quietness. The paintings portray both
the magical and suffocating potential of snow, the wonder at its stark
beauty and the hopelessness that spring might never come.
The first group of the neighborhood series was exhibited in January 2007
at Richard Heller Gallery in LA. The final pieces, consisting primarily
of snow scenes, will be exibited in September 2007 at Galleri Magnus Karlsson
in Stockholm.
|