September 16 – October 17, 2008
Layered Histories
Closing reception: Friday, October 17, 5:30-8 pm.
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Accrual,
2004
Gail Grinnell
graphite on vellum
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Layered Histories
Making art is a cumulative effort; it takes years
to assimilate experience, idea, and desire and transform these phenomena into
visual statements. Viewers might
ask: “Well, what is it that motivates an artist to manipulate materials into a
work of art? Why make work out of
fiber, bronze, mylar or
wood? How does memory play a role
in the making of art?”
“Layered Histories” expands on this discourse
through the presentation of work by two artists who live and work in Seattle,
and whose roots stem from Eastern Washington: Lynda K. Rockwood and Gail Grinnell. Lynda, raised in Randle, Washington,
completed undergraduate and graduate work at Central Washington University, and
also received a graduate degree from the University of Washington. Her mother was born and raised in the
Naches Valley. Grinnell, born in
Richland, Washington, was raised by parents who migrated from a Midwestern farm
community to Washington during the Great Depression and World War II. Grinnell’s father then obtained
employment at the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. Gail is a graduate of the University of Washington, and
currently maintains studios in Cle Elum and Seattle. Gail was awarded
residencies by the Fundacion Valarapriso in Mojacar, Spain for October 2007 and the Ballinglen Arts Foundation in Ballycastle,
Ireland for February/March 2008.
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Strataspade
III, 2007
Lynda K. Rockwood
bronze, glass
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I first discovered Rockwood’s work in 1997 when I
saw her unique two and three-dimensional forms in a Bellevue Art Museum
exhibition titled Nuclear Cities. Her work was mesmerizing as it
captivated viewers not only by the artist’s fine craftsmanship but also by the
numerous layers of meaning evoked by the politically charged and stunningly
beautiful works. Called the Atomic West series, this body of work
challenged patrons to rethink the impact of the atomic age on our culture and
environment.
Through the years I have watched Lynda’s work
evolve as she expands notions of the “organic” and merges idea with material. The sensuous surfaces of her cast glass, hydrostone, fossil and bronze pieces seemingly chart
a geological past that poetically speaks to us in the present. Time, space, science and the unknown
add unconscious ephemera to the experience of viewing each work, whether it be
an earlier piece such as Ash to Ash or the more recent work in which elliptical vessel–like forms navigate space
both vertically and horizontally. Sea Urchin Vessel and Shell Spiral I are two good examples of
the artist’s captivation with the elliptical/vessel forms and evidence her
desire to echo the basic natural underpinnings of design and structure that we
find throughout nature. Susan
Platt addresses this idea of form and structure in her 2007 essay referencing
Rockwood’s Mapping Strata exhibition
at the Francine Seders Gallery in Seattle. Platt states:
“Stratascape I flows through two-dimensional space
as an asymmetrical landscape supporting a cast bronze vessel and
trilobite. The real scale of the
trilobite anchors the work. The
rough edges of the vessel, created by manipulating the mold, suggest an
artifact just taken from the earth. Inside the vessel is another bronze trilobite, a wonderful
contradiction, since the trilobite flourished millions of years before bronze
casting began. Bronze plate,
fabricated on a horizontal plane, comprises the larger shape of Stratascape I. Diagonal cuttings invoke strata. The undulating lower edge and the roughly cut upper edge
imply yet other dimensions. The
rigorous application of layers of patina relies on known and accidental
reactions; chemistry to suggest dense sedimentation….
In the four Strataspades,
a trowel-like shape supports a glass vessel formed of under fired frit glass
creating a texture that suggests granulated snow. But this “iced” glass glows with color: chartreuse, light amber, sienna, spring
green, olive green, aquamarine, and turquoise. They mingle, but do not fuse, leaving layers of deposit.”
This sense of layering, by means of stratification,
is evident in nearly all of Rockwood’s work. Her interest in land forms and nature were influenced, in
part, by family visits to the Naches Valley, where her great grandfather,
William Samuel
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Curl,
2008
Gail Grinnell
ink, acrylic, polyester |
Clark, was one of the first settlers. Rockwood’s exposure to land east of the Cascade mountains,
with its sparse, dry landscape, orchards and gardens, formed childhood memories
that are subtle but important reminders of how being in both a place of mind
and environment impacts one’s work.
For a short period during her childhood, Rockwood’s
family also lived on the Oregon Coast where Lynda discovered marine life and
fossils on the shore. Such objects
became treasures that she utilized to develop her own “form language,”
resulting in mature visual statements. Her work invites scrutiny and a closer look. Ultimately, Rockwood’s work layers her personal experience
with the rhythms of nature. Matthew Kangas summarizes this point in his
September 1996 Sculpture Magazine review of Rockwood’s exhibition at the Anderson Glover Gallery in Kirkland,
Washington:
“Lynda K. Rockwood is good at exploring how sculpture can occupy space
in a tentative way yet have a presence that causes the viewer to slow down and
look more closely.”
Gail Grinnell’s work, on the other hand, focuses on
nature in very different ways, despite the fact that her work shares similar
themes with that of Rockwood: a
layering of materials, a visual vocabulary that involves nature, and a passion
for making unique and surprising forms. I first saw Grinnell’s work
in a solo exhibition at the Francine Seders Gallery several years ago. The work I viewed in that exhibition
featured drawings on wood depicting tangles of knotted rope–like forms that
seemingly snaked over and through the wood grain of each piece. I was initially attracted by the gutsy
use of the wood and loved the dichotomy of beautifully rendered marks on
rough-hewn wood planks. They spoke
to me as images of survival and tenacity---threads to family life that at times
can constrict as well as unite relationships.
Grinnell has been producing work that layers not
only materials like fabric, paint, cloth, collage and paper, but also ideas and
evocations of her family history and the layered inner dependencies that mark
life. Several works from her Bitter Love series appear in this
exhibition and challenge the viewer to think of them as plant, body, pattern,
muscle, tendon, garment, ruffle, or ghostly spirit. Writer Susan Beal speaks to these issues in a 2006 review of
Grinnell’s work:
“….Grinnell’s large-scale organic forms are made up
of vintage dressmaking patterns layered with silk and polyester interfacings
and overlaid with intricate black-and-white drawings of human anatomy. Illustrations of sinew, ligament,
tendon, muscle, and bone are likened to tailor’s tools, conflating the
connectivity of the body with the craft of the clothing that covers it…”
Elizabeth Bryant
elaborates on the Bitter Love series
in the following excerpt from the exhibit brochure. She states:
“….her surfaces form a
skin both tough and fragile, durable and depleted. Her figures morph and swell, pulling against gravity like
half-filled balloons billowing like laundry on the line, boneless and buoyant
as jellyfish.”
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Sea Urchin
Vessel, 2004
Lynda K. Rockwood
bronze, hydrostone, marine fossil |
Work such as Eddy and Curl evidence this “flowering”
departure from the rectangle thus allowing her billowing forms to “float” over
and on the wall. Grinnell’s
earlier work also embraced transparency as she combined silk, tissue paper and
cellophane to create collages that evoked ethereal laundry hung on a line. Much of Gail’s work subtly alludes to
the quotidian tasks of domestic life. She married at a young age and raised four children. Her childhood was impacted by the art
of sewing as her mother devoted many hours to this task. Therefore, the act of making work that
utilizes sewing techniques is, for this artist, a life affirming process –
connecting her with her past. Gail
states: “I want the process for
making my pieces to be evident, so that when looking at the work one can
imagine the movements involved in its making – the repetitive motions for
making the work corresponding to the repetitive requirements of being a
caretaker”
Layered
Histories presents the opportunity to go “beneath the surface” and into the heart and
soul of these artists’ work. The
viewer is invited to relish in the contrasting layers of materials (silk to
bronze, paper to stone, and polyester to wood) and contemplate the ideas behind
the images and forms featured in this exhibition. It is a pleasure to present the work of Lynda K. Rockwood
and Gail Grinnell to our constituency.
Cheryl
H. Hahn
Director
and Curator
Larson
Gallery
Susan Beal is a writer from Seattle, Washington
Elizabeth
Bryant is an art historian and writer residing in Seattle, Washington
Matthew Kangas is a writer and art critic living in Seattle,
Washington
Susan
Platt is a free lance writer, art historian and curator based in Seattle,
Washington
This exhibition is made possible by
grants from Abbott’s Printing, Sandy Dahl, Carolyn Price Dyer and M. Clark
Dyer, Daryl and Sherrie Parker, Puterbaugh Construction, Sundquist Foundation, and the Larson
Gallery Guild.
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