Friday, June 13, 2014

Phaze Five - Ingrid Mary Percy - Polychrome Fine Art - Review by Debora Alanna

Thursday, May 22, 2014


Ingrid Mary Percy – Phaze Five – review by Debora Alanna

This review was originally posted on Exhibit-v...

Ingrid Mary Percy
Phaze Five
8 – 22 May 2014
Polychrome Fine Art
977 – A Fort Street
Victoria BC
Review by Debora Alanna

The poetic act consists of suddenly seeing that an idea splits up into a number of equal motifs and of grouping them; they rhyme.

Stéphane Mallarmé (1842-1898), French Symbolist poet. repr. In Mallarmé: The Poems, ed. and trans. by Keith Bosley (1977). Variations sur un sujet, ‘Crise de Vers,’ La Revue Blanche (Paris, September 1895).

The multiple (that) must be made, not always by adding sobriety; with the number of dimensions one already has available – always n-1 dimensions… A rhizome as subterranean stem… (And) assumes very diverse forms, from ramified surface extension in all directions…

~ Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, Capitalism and Schizophrenia, p. 7

Phaze Five is Ingrid Mary Percy’s second exhibition at Polychrome Fine Art. The show consists of works on paper and polychromatic wood based sculpture, a hybrid of painted surface and forms, most wall mounted, some free standing. Works in both realms consist of painted planes cut and assembled. Her sculptures often include multi-coloured golf tees. The exhibition title, Phaze Five, was borrowed from the title of a cassette tape by the Steel Pan Mania band. Works are mostly titled Untitled, with song titles from this cassette in parentheses and some with original titles Percy composed. ‘Untitled’ seems to refer to what cannot be named, experiences that are beyond naming. The use of the tape titles in parenthesis is a foray, a means towards the artists’ enterprise, guiding us, fastening us to a possibility within the encounter with her work.

Urban dictionaries describe phaze to mean ‘remove status boosts by way of moves that force a switch’ and ‘insulting someone just for the sake of insulting them and to receive a reaction’. There are a lot of sexual plays involved to obtain the outcomes, potentially in both descriptions of phazeFive, is ‘high performance’, ‘cool’. The Steel Pan Mania band may have wanted to evoke these urban references. Percy’s association to these references is inadvertent, hit and misses in their connections to her work or the premises seen within the show if they exist at all. Untitled (Right or Wrong) may be contemplated with the sexual implications; however there is nothing crude in Percy’s work. Sexuality is asserted but not with offence implicit in urban street jargon. There are no insults, but this reviewer has been affected, boosted by her assault of colour sense, potency of composition and universal forces that do not ‘switch’ but certainly toggles any complacency to a revving of sensory revelation and approbation of her intuitive disclosure. Reactions, indubitably. So yes, ‘Five’.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Right or Wrong)
11.75 x 18”. Arcylic paint & paper. Photo courtesy the artist.

In 1962, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City organized a Symposium on Pop art. Invitees Hilton Kramer, Dore Ashton, Leo Steinberg and Stanley Kunitz panel transcript was published in Arts Magazine, April 1963. Ashton explained how John Cage praised Rauschenberg ‘because he makes no pretense at aesthetic selection.’ The ‘quality of the encounter’ between his choices are not metaphorical but ‘chance encounters in the continuum of random sensation he calls life’. Aston asserted that ‘a voluntary diminution of choices’ enabled artists working in the Pop era the ability to ‘shun metaphor’ that resulted in an ‘impoverished genre’. Chance titling of Percy’s exhibition may seem to give her work a release of responsibility from its original association. In spite of her choice of chance designation, associations are not entirely displaced, albeit the contexts are relational to her practice.

Leo Steinberg in the same 1962 panel said, ‘The artist does not simply make a thing, an artifact, or in the case of Baudelaire, a poem with its own beat and structure of evocation and image. What he creates is a provocation, a particular, unique and perhaps novel relation with reader or viewer.’ Steinberg recalled what Victor Hugo wrote to Baudelaire after reading Les Fleurs du Mal: ‘You create a new shudder.’ Percy’s work is provocation and encourages uncanny relations with viewers of her work. She has indeed created a new shudder because there is an invigorating connectivity, a metaphoric serendipity between the fortuitous titling. Her revelations are a frisson of vivacity.

Percy has revisited her imagery seen on the University of Victoria (UVic) web, reconsidered ideas through shapes in her paper works. Blue Wall, Pink Wall and the processes involved in Yellow WallShaped Tartan from that period are reinvestigated well. Her show at the Deluge Contemporary, Supra in 2005 and her last show at her 2012 Squilloexhibition at Polychrome Fine Art investigated Spirograph images as devices do not appear in this work. Her Squillo exhibition silkscreened overlays included iconographic singers’ portraits, a Pop influence in circular surrounds are absent. The shapes and overlapping is consistent and carried over to Phaze Five’s works on paper. Percy’s interest in circular imagery that she continues to overlay, group and develops within new contexts is married with further shape configurations. She has widened her repertoire, allowing intricacies and complexity to flourish, enabling further symbology and celebration within her visual vocabulary and dialogue. We are confronted by scales of chance colour choices obtained from slicing her student off cast paintings. She imposes her choice selecting strips and colour combinations to deliberately juxtapose. Planar treatments are tested, sometimes asymmetrically for tonal variety. Memorable phasing from one shape to another adjacent or overlaid seem cyclical in the reiteration that is more fugue-like because each shape and positioning is never duplicated. Percy’s specific shape and colour references are relational. She plays, is attuned to ideas within the work. Steps between the works become contrapuntal patterns of behaviour. Circular imagery appears as snowflake cut outs and flower shapes with zigzags and curly cut designs in several current works. Also, stylized female breasts appear in three works.

Untitled (Pax) (the Latin for peace, with a top necklace like string of pearly connected paper on grey paper oviods, a circlet positioned as a necklace with a dovish feathery embellishment, a peace symbol above the large concentric circles below and a cerulean garland beneath the two central ovoids. The larger collaged central entities are circular painted treatments on top of solid, unyielding treatments - black, grey, black, then rosy. The dark under the rose shows breasts heavy with the weight of warring.
Untitled (Duo) is more Pop, more assertive, more let’s bare all declaration and affirmation of exemplified feminine strength.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Pax)
18.x 11.75” Acrylic paint & paper. Photo courtesy the artist.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Duo)
18.x 11.75” Acrylic paint & paper. Photo courtesy the artist.

Concentric circles and other entopic patterns has been a visual tool since cave paintings. Late in the 19th century, Hilma af Klint employed abstracted geometry including circular investigations, exploring the ideal formations and its premises through interrogatory paintings (although af Klint denied questioning) before Wassily Kandinsky painted Seven Circles. Feminist texts, such as the Woman's Art Journal, Vol. 19, No. 2 (Autumn, 1998 - Winter, 1999) containing the The Pink Glass Swan: Selected Essays on Feminist Art by Lucy Lippard speaks about the female experience in relation to concentric circles. Circles, concentric circles are a pervasive archetype in Phaze Five. Percy’s work dwells in lyric confrontations. She employs deep whimsy and spirited connectivity throughout her world. We see a conscientious nod to feminist forbearers while Percy maintains her own vision, embodying, in the Piet Mondrian sensibility, universality. (let’s transpose Mondrian’s use of noun/pronoun in this excerpt of his writing...)

The cultivated man of today is gradually turning away from natural things and his life is becoming more and more abstract. Natural (external) things become more and more automatic and we observe that our vital attention fastens more and more on internal things. The life of the truly modern man is neither purely materialist nor purely emotional. It manifests itself rather as a more autonomous life of the human mind becoming conscious of itself. Modern man – although a unity of body, mind and soul – exhibits a changed consciousness: every expression of his life has today a different aspect, that is, an aspect more positively abstract. It is the same with art. Art will become the product of another duality in man: the product of a cultivated externality and of an inwardness deepened and more conscious. As a pure representation of the human mind, art will express itself in an aesthetically purified, that is to say, abstract form. The truly modern artist is aware of abstraction in an emotion of beauty; he is conscious of the fact that the emotion of beauty is cosmic, universal. This conscious recognition has for its corollary an abstract plasticism, for man adheres only to what is universal.

Natural Reality and Abstract Reality, Piet Mondrian, 1919.

Cutting paper has enjoyed an ancient and enduring tradition. Paper cutting, cutting to form to provide the viewer with a drawing/painting-like experience, has existed since paper and scissors/tools to incise paper existed, allowing the discipline to flourish worldwide for centuries, conveyed into contemporary art practices -20th and 21st century collage artists (too many to mention), notwithstanding:

· China since 200 BC;
· Monkiri (antiquated) by the Japanese after the 10th century;
· 13th century medieval Europe paper cutting /collage;
· Mary Delany’s (and undoubtedly others) decoupage in the 18th century;
· 19th century book covers (Carl Spitweg i.e., et al.), utilized collage;
· Paper cutting by Mexicans in the papel picado style;
· German paper cut art -scherenschnitte, areknippen;
· Netherlands, guajian;
· Polish paper cuts – wycinanki;
· Psaligraphy, paper cut silhouette

Percy’s shapes are cut, overlaid and glued to paper or wood, embracing the decoupage tradition.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (I’ll be with you)
18.x 11.75” Acrylic paint & paper. Photo courtesy the artist.

Untitled (I’ll be with you) is a winter white ground with unexpected florals, ovoids and two coloured snowflakes. All cut outs of painted surfaces form quite separate and distinct from the other. Percy dances summery memories on rime. The absence of coalescence is striking, aside from the inventive, albeit arbitrary painted surfaces that are later delineated similarly. Comparable flower shapes offer solo harmonics. Yet they play together in harmonious colour whimsy. Seasonal referencing is reinforced with the familiar shapes stuck to the picture plane as itinerant memories segregated and distinct, dominating the work. The painted colours are muted and differential. Each a disconnected experience is jumbled, non sequential in the remembering. Striated oviods are bubbles of demarcated time, unevenly filled with unrelated painted sections, recognizable as human experience in the way that memories coexist. In some, the remembering is not quite intact, divided, broken. An innocence of simplified shapes hearkens to the incorruptibility of hope as individual floating joy bubbles, memorable notes. This work shows the unqualified acceptance of another’s connection the way musicians trust another player to perform individuality for the other’s benefit, requiring conviction in mutual goals to obtain concert, unity.

Visual refrains in unique mandala shapes/notes – a different shape for each mantra/note quality conceded. A little reluctance exists in the bemused hodgepodge. The layout of the work shows a need for affirmation that individuals accomplish when playing off each other with a recurring effervesce. Because of the repeat of stripes, improvisational within modest shapes placed in various directions, multidimensional, a flexible rhythmic understructure, the snowflake duad and the complementary instrumentation performed by various parts / thoughts plays leggier (lightly/delicately), beguiles as indefinite pitches. Expectant optimism aspires imperturbably.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Mania)
5.62 x 3.62”. Acrylic paint & paper. Photo courtesy the artist

Jazzy in its sophistication, improvisational rhythm and bright zaniness, the above work is seemingly uncomplicated, enchanting in its decorous straightforwardness. However, the work is possessed with tense confrontations. Percy combines the striae found in her sculptures, a heady hard-edged abstraction of reason above left and hovering as the dominating rigour of sound advice. Concentric circles referring to femininity (3rd work with this specific reference) and personal vision are presented as pale blue orbs dotted with yellow areolas punctuated with obsessively precise black tips. These orbs are outlets and instruments that couples the viewer to the work. She expounds with light and darkness of being within the context of orbital paths we inhabit, paths that might seem to coexist with the help of the misshapen, complicated floral adornment and enhancement. Percy’s arrangement holds worlds together that somewhat entraps in its assertive charm.

Coral points of diversion and perspicacity, sharp multiplex incisions appear warm amid serious twinkles diagonally placed to moderate transversely, inducing insight. These flowers accompany Percy’s cut shapes that are straightforwardly Matisse contours beside and below the picture plane. Percy unapologetically emulates Matisse’s Jazz oeuvre created with scissors. Untitled (Mania) encompasses overgrown desire, passion overcoming individuality, an impediment to see beyond the cacophony of growth. This ground is dark, inferring that she is portraying an unconscious or subconscious state of existence. A corrupted ovoid between leaf and leafy climb connects physically with the doubled/mirrored trapezoid shape above, with a shared colour intervention. These two contrary shapes are two parts of survival, motivation and the diminutive but important niggle and naissance perpetually egging us on in continual interaction, complementary in their difference, although an awkward relationship.

In all Percy’s paper works we see a device for making or breaking or changing connections. Her light hearted exuberance allows patterns to present as archetypes which may be misconstrued as decorative. Eva Hesse stressed the censorious implications of the word decorative in her 1970 interview with Cindy Nemser, published in Artforum, 1970: ‘To me that word, or the way I use it or feel about it, is the only art sin.’ Associating Percy’s work with decorative results is a transgression, although she utilizes the parallel lines that Hesse included in her remarks on the subject. Like Hesse, Percy repeats forms to emphasise, to articulate absurdity with patterns of behaviour. Combinations of qualities, tendencies form a consistent or characteristic arrangement. Percy’s work shows that in her practice, like Hesse, art, work and life are connected. Percy takes risks because her work is perceptual structure, including not only objects (shapes), but the spaces between them making complex compositions of knowledge as elements and their combinations. And like Hesse, Percy’s work explores, articulates ‘the unknown factor of art and the unknown factor of life’.[1] Nothing decorative here. We are witness to motives, the epitome of origins that gives us a means to decipher the strands of life and art.
Each of Percy’s paper works are redolent with unspoken poetic staging of the human experiential exposé all rendered with indiscriminately painted grounds the way life is beyond planning. Vibrant and engaging, we observe reflection through the shapes and fragments she cuts and positions to ease the understanding of existence. Percy’s paper works sing vociferously about what scores and patterns us, lifts us, holds us in place. She allows us to emote within the discreet opera of her blithe ingenuity under the guise of inveterate, enduring motifs embracing the familiar where connectivity deliberates intention.

Victory Over the Sun, a 1913 Russian Futurist Opera with sets and costumes designed by Kasimir Malevich, includes the libretto in ‘Zaum’ language by Aleksei Kruchonykh, which he coined. Zaum is ‘made up of the Russian prefix ‘beyond, behind’ and noun the mind, nous’ and has been translated as ‘transreason’, ‘transration’ or ’beyonsense’ ‘by Paul Schmidt. According to scholar Gerald Janecek, Zaum can be defined as ‘experimental poetic language characterized by indeterminacy in meaning.’ [2] Percy has developed a transreasonal vocabulary of shapes, a kind of Zaum of organic poetics and probable congruous vocabulary.

These lines might refer, point by point, to the self-regulating capacities of a brain, to the emanations of a divine pleroma, to the operating procedures of an information network, or to a secret cipher.

K., Roberto Calasso, Jonathan Cape, London, 2005, pg. 252

Protect yourself better
protect yourself wanderer

with the road that is walking too.

The Sonnets to Orpheus, Appendix (Fragments), Rainer Maria Rilke, Translated by Stephen Mitchell, Simon and Schuster, N.Y., 1985, pg. 155

Percy has developed an oeuvre employing painted strips collaged on the face of wood and impaled works with multi-coloured golf tees reminiscent of n'kisi (also known as minkisis[3]) from the Kongo, although Percy’s bodies are variable abstracted shapes. The n’kisi entities hold the powers of ancestors and allow a moral rightness to be asserted. ‘The metal objects commonly pounded into the surface of the power figures represent the minkisis' active roles during ritual or ceremony. Each nail or metal piece represents a vow, a signed treaty and efforts to abolish evil. Ultimately, these figures most commonly represent reflections upon socially unacceptable behaviours and efforts to correct them.[4] Percy’s work with tees with additional direction from her titles expounds concisely expressed precepts, assertive views without question though always open to interpretation.

Ichiro Irie, Hyoungseok Kimand and others have employed golf tees in their work. What is unique about Percy’s use of the tees is they drive rhythmically, boldly as colour punctuation, analogous of dynamic accents, breath marks, censura, staccato/markato symbols within music scores. Strips and tees are utilized in distinct compositions for each piece. The stripes of mismatched bounding lines are cut and placed in the mostly the same direction on each piece – some work in a vertical direction, some diagonal. Other works include painted cut out shapes that are overlaid with swatches or shapes of paper, sometimes crumpled. Each work has a unique configuration of contour and has predominantly smoothly sanded sides to discreetly reveal the plywood layers. Again, the titles are Untitled, with the music cassette titles employed as parenthesised additions to the work description.

Artists using strips of colour as compositional devices are abundant - Genn ThomasCardy Ryman, for example. Many employ panel painting with overlaid shapes including Richard Tuttle, Rauschenberg. Reiner Ruthenbeck’s Moebel (strips of dark red cloth on a steel wire netting box on stilts) and his Ash heap (ashes, wire, 92 iron sticks) seen in the 2014 Venice Biennale is a two part installation with strips and impaling points. The means is not the absolute way as others have employed similar or the same materials, treatments etc, each artist speaking through their own touch, their own thought processes that become evident in their work. Percy’s work is quintessentially unique, expounding patterns of existence derived from our collective experience as accessible presence.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Ouch)
3 x 3.5 x .88”. Acrylic paint, wood & golf tees.

Titled as an interjection or a clasp for a brooch or pin, buckle, a setting for jewels - all of these ideas work for Untitled (Ouch). Pain and surprise of sharp corners descending up and down a little jaggedly from a continuous plane, topped with the force of impalement, even if the colourful commitment is slyly appealing is an imposition on normalcy. Change hurts. A little jewel, tees fastened and set caching the buckle shape, we clasp our eyes to this multifaceted gem. Four tees for forthright assertiveness. Smarting pleasure quadrupled.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Lying Excuses)
12 x 7 x 1.75”.Acrylic paint, wood & golf tees.
Photo courtesy the artist.

‘In an oblique shot, also called a Dutch angle, the camera is tilted laterally on a tripod so it is no longer parallel with the horizon. The oblique shot takes the straight lines of the world and presents them as diagonals. This type of shot is generally used to give an overwhelming sense of the world’s being unbalanced or out of kilter. One of the classic employments of the oblique angle is in Carol Reed’s The Third Man (1949), a mystery set in post-World War 11 Vienna. The tilted shot is largely responsible for the film’s overall sense of a world in which human values and actions are distorted.’ [5]

Untitled (Lying Excuses) is set askew. Although this work and like works in this exhibition are not directly related to photography, Percy utilizes the tilting technique described above, first seen in a 1919 film, The Cabinet of Dr Caligari, then called the German angle, a devise often employed in German expressionist paintings. This works well in Percy’s piece to accentuate the pertinent content discerned through the title, Untitled (Lying and Excuses), angst that occurs with human foible of deceit. Left inclined black and white pegs, points to obdurate extremes where compromise is impossible. These rivaling opinions are relegated to the tip side, the tees weighing the slant. Swatches of golden sharp flat nuggets pasted on the main lines of inquiry are disruptions of rough cut disoriented squares, imperatives as impediments to the paths of parallel action, long thin deliberationsDark blue, mostly with tinges of green are interpolate with heavy pink painted strips, a vis-a-vis conversation follow the lengths of sharp, irregularly pointed wood ends, spiky retorts that are sent off the far end of reason.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Always Be You)
12 x 12 x 1.75”. Acrylic paint, wood & golf tees.
Photo courtesy the artist.

Untitled (Always Be You) tilts also, but more, as if the extra tilting to Untitled (Lying Excuses) is to be offset, disputed or contradicted, as humans do to argue against, challenge emphatically one controversial characteristic or event that is in opposition to refute and stress an obstinate emotion or thought in an adamant fashion. This work has the tees congregating on the top in two camps, groupings of what is at stake within two points of view. Both clusters attempt to be somewhat upright and seem to adjust for the sake of the whole (work). The lengths of strips are more staggered in length, confidence wavering and reactivating, vibrantly interplaying as requisite needs dazzle when felt, displayed in rapid succession. Untitled (Always Be You) is dynamic affirmation considered in this scenario, which is intense, leans farther towards a change of direction. Contrary to the look anger and disappointment detailed in the previous work, this is the expression of compromise, self assertion, the need for leaning forward to an earnest entreat that upholds integrity. Percy includes rutting in upholding, but segregating contrary stubborn points of view (tees). Championing autonomy (for the plural or singular ‘you’ – either/both) is a serrated and abounding enterprise.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Paradise)
10 x 11.5 x 1.75”. Acrylic paint, wood.
Photo courtesy the artist.

Untitled (Paradise) is a self contained island without the impervious tees. This paradise is mottled with infelicity. The swatches blend uncomfortably with the strips and do not strictly follow the formal lines most other works adhere to, some awry. Percy’s composition is an organic island shape, an ideal circumspect corps, a germ of a willful idea where the essential but imperfect paradise originates.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (Sea, Water & Sand)
10.75 x 6.5 x 1.75”. Acrylic paint, wood & golf tees.
Photo courtesy the artist.

Untitled (Sea, Water & Sand) refers to the details of beach topography. The sunny vertical strip, reflectively compliments and enlivens colour on the other verticals, variable consequences extending off the main formation, longer looks, extra stretches exploring the spell of the place. A large divided swatch of watery blue intensity evokes a concentrated tract of water, tides of divided time. In the title, (sea), a precise type of water, induces the viewer to think broadly and then specifically (water), the specificity of a personal encounter. Imagining going somewhere and then being where you decided to go might be a comparison to Percy’s piece experience. She evokes sand and frolic where the background merges with lives envisioning and experiencing happy repose. Tees gather to the lower right as hours marked, days passing and counted, holding the enchantment constrained to measure, off centre and slightly hidden from the main imagery but noticeable nevertheless. We must handle what is never enough time when you are planning or having fun.

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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (In Your Face) - REVERSO
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Ingrid Mary Percy: Untitled (In Your Face)
9.25 x 6.25 x 3”. Acrylic paint, wood & golf tees.
Photo courtesy the artist.

Kierkegaard shows that the plane of the infinite, which he calls the plane of faith, must become a pure plane of immanence that continually and immediately imparts, reimpartsand regathers the finite… Perception will no longer reside in the relation between a subject and an object, but rather in the movement serving as the limit of that relation, in the period associated with the subject and object. Perception will confront its own limit; it will be in the midst of things, throughout its own proximity, as the presence of one haecceity in another, the prehension of one by the other or the passage from one to the other: Look only at the movements.

~ Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, Capitalism and Schizophrenia, p. 311

The nkisi figures brought back to Europe in the nineteenth century in particular caused great interest in stimulating emerging trends in modern art and African themes previously considered primitive or ugly were now viewed as aesthetically interesting. The pieces became influential in art circles and many were acquired by art museums. The intentions of the banganga who created minkisi were practical, that is their characteristics were dictated by the need of the object to do the work it was required to do—hence the nails which caused a sensation were never seen as decorative items but as a requirement of awakening the spirit; or the gestures were part of a substantial metaphor of gestures found in Kongo culture.

~ Wyatt MacGaffey, ‘'Magic, or as we usually say 'Art': A Framework for Comparing African and European Art,’ in Enid Schildkrout and Curtis Keim, eds. The Scramble for Art in Central Africa, (Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998) pp. 217-235.

Percy’s work featured on the poster for the Phaze Five exhibition is Untitled (In Your Face). Protruding reversed tees are jagged, edgy, change course or direction. Tees are driven into the work with unrestrained irregularity around the elliptic edges, except for the bottom of the work, withstanding enough. The front of the work has tees pounded in a central gathering. The painted strips are vertical with a slight incline. Tees on the sides are intractable contravention, wilfully wayward, a frenzied tenacious infringing as fringe. The central nogs are concave top revealed and point, bottoms up connected by an assembly of the forms as a central headstrong configuration, a wholly charismatic termination and departure correspondence.

The title, Untitled (In Your Face) shares the work’s provocative stance. The tee treatment is not un coup d’épingle, (policy of pin pricks) where trifling hostile acts spurs conflict. Percy’s response to whatever is contrary, too close for comfort is the interchange between coursing tees that are substantial in relation to the size of the work and the vertical bands. Distinguishing this piece is the hold by the tees’ lack of symmetry contrary to firm perpendicular painted sliced bars, a combatant force integrated with formidable candour. Like the n’kisi figures’ nails, Percy’s tees instigate a metaphorical awakening to cogency inducing intensive vigilance in the viewer where complacency is impossible. Geometry of parallel lines intensifies clarity in their relentlessness. Percy engages the viewer with her combinations of surfaces, forms and their behaviours in this moving exchange. Percy’s Untitled (In Your Face) confronts us and we pay attention.
Associating Percy’s work to fetish named and claimed by cultures imposing colonialism is flawed. Sexual transference to objects as Freud began to emphasize in the 20s, calling objects fetishes - charms that fascinate or lure as a substitute for human parts is an erroneous comparison to Percy’s work. Any inadvertent comparison the artist had with the original intent of n’kisi is possible with the intent of Percy’s work. There is a similar power to cultural objects used to connect with ancestral prowess that Percy’s work evokes akin to the primal need to connect with life forces. With the many varied strips, the boarders and central placement of contentious attack, the tees are valid arguments, though a central bewilderment at the heart of the piece and ever present mantle of challenging conflict.

Early 20th Century artists appropriated the imagery from African artifacts to address their own need for mystical or braver ideas. Recombinant ideas, not appropriation is present in this exhibition. Phaze Five. shows there is a primal need to address the multiple plateaus of understanding. Percy addresses fundamental aspects of humanity with a hybrid of media, of materials and quotidian forms, of painting and sculpture, found and fashioned work. Her ideas are melody and discord together. Diverse and extensive, Percy’s Phaze Five amalgams rollick.

Recesses exist on the back of Percy’s works. An unintentional reference to the n'kisi entities, although uncannily analogous, these enclaves become a receding part of the work, an indent to suspend or defer or direct the viewer’s connection with the world, redefining the relationship from observer to physical interaction. N'kisi apertures are often frontal, but not always.

Secret and secluded on the back of this work (and others), a small round hollow is available for placing something in the recess. The observer would not know that this secluded indentation is available without the artist demonstrating its existence. However, once it is known, one defers interest in the front of the work. Curiosity and intrigue takes hold, a private adventurous possibility. There is no cover to the small round opening. A pause from the work to reverse its content enables a sculpture in the round, becomes a personal choice (what shall I put here?); a directive and a direction availed by the artist. The artist acts as intermediary between the work and the viewer. We become included in the work as we must decide if we are going to acknowledge the niche or not, even if we own the work and can put something within its space. Knowing is a current of interpolation.

In his address, ‘Experimental Music’ given to the Music Teachers National Association convention in Chicago in 1957, John Cage said, referring to composing parts with multi-tracked tapes and machines and how the listener is ‘not concerned with harmoniousness as generally understood, where the quality of harmony results from a blending of several elements, points where fusion occurs are many (...) This disharmony, to paraphrase Bergson’s statement about disorder, is simply a harmony to which many are unaccustomed.’ Cage’s presentation culminated in an answer to questions he posed, ‘Where do we go from here?’ He was referring to sound, music and composition. He suggested ‘theatre’. However, his additional response to his own question as a suggestion is applicable to all art practices: ‘...the answer must take the form of paradox: a purposeful purposelessness or a purposeless play. This play, however, is an affirmation of life – not an attempt to bring order out of chaos nor to suggest improvements in creation, but simply a way of waking up to the very life we’re living, which is so excellent once one gets one’s mind and one’s desires out of its way and lets it act of its own accord.’ [6]
Percy’s Phaze Five works live within the realm of the Cagean Silent Prayer (s) where meditation and contemplation are brought forward in her ‘transbeyond’ entreaties, illuminating and expounding on universal experiences providing a lyric visual capitulation. Percy’s oeuvre acknowledges the playful, theatrical as studies in projected dissonance, disharmony of media that resolves to sonorous introspection, the cacophony and subtly of colour, of hard abstraction contrapuntal to curves. Indescribable cut surfaces and curvaceous shapes blended with precise strict compositional stripes and intuitively gathered tees disrupt and emit enthusiastic voluble clusters of evidence that one must puncture the status quo to articulate alliances. Interposing assertions and enigma within juxtaposed and cooperative existences articulates the paradox of living.
Percy’s show is alert and lively. Each of these works thrives playfully beyond desirousness and mindfulness. She drives and holds questions about the quintessential human experience with dramatic, celebratory aplomb, to a tee. Percy’s exhibition, Phaze Five is a steelpan carnival.


[1] Eva Hesse in conversation with Cindy Nemser (1970). Artforum 1970. Copyright © Cindy Nemser.
[2] Janecek, Gerald. Zaum: The Transrational Poetry of Russian Futurism. San Diego: San Diego State University Press, 1996:  ISBN 978-1879691414
[3] Jan Vansina, Paths in the Rainforest: Toward a History of Political Tradition in Equatorial Africa (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1990), p. 146 and 297; but see also Vansina's corrective statements in How Societies Are Born: Governance in West Central Africa Before 1600 (Charlottesville, VA and London: University of Virginia Press, 2004), pp. 51-52.
[4] ‘The Metropolitan Museum of Art’. Power Figure (Nkisi N'Kondi: Mangaaka).
[5] Mamer, Bruce (2008). ’Oblique Shot (Dutch Angle)’. Film Production Technique: Creating the Accomplished Image. Belmont: Cengage Learning. p. 9.
[6] John Cage, ‘Experimental Music’ from Silence. © 1973 by John Cage, Wesleyan University Press. 

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Expanse

This work, 'Expanse', was made for  a friend. She is a  midwife. Her vocation inspired the work, a stone carving made with hand tools. Texas Cream Limestone is firm, and yet does not require power tools to carve.The stone does have some fossil presentation to navigate around, through.

I have been fortunate to experience birthing three times, which helped impart the emotions involved in 'Expanse'. The birthing process involves an uninterrupted segment of time that the mother engages with, a bodily engagement of intense passage with involuntary  movement and intrinsic thought, feelings guiding, extending her corporeal self, spreading and contorting her self, expanding her body to allow the emergence of what has been growing within. Birthing is an extension of conception and its development arching, emerging from the body. 'Expanse' shows the inherent process, the fundamental nature of conception and resultant birthing and what is bound between mother and emerging child.

'Expanse' ~ in progress
This work is about the birthing process
Texas Cream Limestone. 8 x 5 x 6 inches
'Expanse' ~ in progress
This work is about the birthing process
Texas Cream Limestone. 8 x 5 x 6 inches

'Expanse' ~ side view
This work is about the birthing process
Texas Cream Limestone. 8 x 5 x 6 inches

'Expanse' ~ back view
This work is about the birthing process
Texas Cream Limestone. 8 x 5 x 6 inches

'Expanse' ~ top view
This work is about the birthing process
Texas Cream Limestone. 8 x 5 x 6 inches

'Expanse' ~ front view
This work is about the birthing process
Texas Cream Limestone. 8 x 5 x 6 inches


Thursday, March 06, 2014

Daniel Laskarin - 'fallen and found' - review by Debora Alanna

Thursday, March 6, 2014


Fallen and Found exhibit by Daniel Laskarin reviewed by Debora Alanna


“… it is also true that without flashes of the absolute, which are granted to only a few, humanity would proceed in the dark, indeed it would not exist, because it would not acknowledge itself to itself! And as far as I know the flash as never preceded by explanations or preambles, and only a very small mind… could fail to understand thateternal aspirationabsolute and that the work is the relative, that to create is already to circumscribe; that to comment is to circumscribe the circumscribed, is to subdivide the divided; is to reduce to minimum terms, is to annihilate.”
~‘Boccioni, his artist statement on the ‘flash of the Absolute’: his lecture ‘La Pittura Futurista’, at the Associazione Artistica Internationale, Rome May 1911; as quoted in “Futurism”, ed. By Didier Ottinger; Centre Pompidou / 5 Continents Editions, Milan, 2008, p. 55
Daniel Laskarin’s current work, fallen and found, is currently installed at the Deluge Contemporary in Victoria. In the Carl Andre sense, Laskarin is a matterist. However, Laskarin enjoys manipulating materials, which Andre might have misunderstood. His sculptures, two that are ground oriented, one upright or erect, an ostensible homage to Donald Judd, with Laskarin’s further development of stacking, several wall mounted assemblages, sculpted poems with a video projecting in a continuous loop above the descending staircase (yes, Duchampian) is an oblique inclination of the never ending need to search for import and the inevitable escalation of searching, reiterating the unrelenting process. fallen and found articulates Laskarin’s investigations regarding ideas about fallen, falling and found, finding.
Laskarin, a meticulous craftsman, delineates with precision. Found objects inspire, are utilized and are transported away from exact definitions or the exacting credence that found objecthood imports.  His virtuosic use of materials coruscates with his brilliancy.He incorporates his own designs with objects that transgress their original use. He espouses colour, especially through material effecting strategies, changed states occurring with acid or gumming. Donald Judd referred to ‘specific objects’ being neither paintings or sculpture, but more credible than either segregated discipline. Laskarin’s work remains sculpture, surpassing Judd’s hold on exclusion, although cleaving to the integrity of the indefinable. Laskarin articulates the palpable absolute with integrity, rigorously eclipsing definitions, while gleaning the nuances of the fallible, the lapsing, defeat, the culpability of the indefatigable - fallen and the search, epiphany of discovery, initiating, establishing and advancing, grounding - found.
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fallen - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found - Deluge 2014.
~photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin
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fallen - Daniel Laskarin – detail.
fallen and found - Deluge 2014.
~ photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin
fallen is the reversal or the inside out of vented fury. Laskarin externalizes the outcome of unremitting discharge materialized as a traumatized munificence, a substantial rectangular aluminum shell insinuatingly raised slightly off the floor. The elongated lozenge casing surface has been commandeered with a barrage of jagged punctures, impelled pock marks jut out of the berated work, out of the seduction of baked powder coated aluminum. Eruptions mar, trounce outer surface continuity, consternating the subdued gleam of the crust. Vigorously ballistic, the sculpture braces intensity by barrelling the work’s surface with demonstrative wincing, roughly connecting unresolved seams that torque alignment. Conclusive, the work’s ends are enclosed denoting a temporal extent.
Low, Laskarin has inserted a slender, sleek core secreted within the containment. The strategic plane of dark metal unhindered by internalized bombardment asserts an enigmatic terseness.  The impervious, immovable crux of being a continuum survives in spite of salvos, assails that yields as downfall. Disorderly, heavy routing and censure cannot affect vital focus.
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failure of flight - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
~photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin
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failure of flight - Daniel Laskarin - detail.

I now note that ordinarily I am concerned with, focus my attention upon, things or ‘objects,' the words on the page. But I now note that these are always situated within what begins to appear to me as a widening field which ordinarily is a background from which the ‘object' or thing stands out. I now find by a purposeful act of attention that I may turn to the field as field, and in the case of vision I soon also discern that the field has a kind of boundary or limit, a horizon. This horizon always tends to ‘escape' me when I try to get at it; it ‘withdraws' always on the extreme fringe of the visual field. It retains a certain essentially enigmatic character. ~ Don Idhe (1976) [1]
Poised on a wall, an elongated structure of velvety proficiency shelves a lumpity, leaning bronze casting of a miniature rocket with the debris of the mould making, purportedly an unacceptable result. failed rocket, recalcitrant in its positioning, explicating the out of sight, out of mind arrangement, articulates a stubborn resistance to expose refractory results of the cast while upholding the chunky amalgamate as a prized relic of 60s prosperity bolstered so we may venerate its survival. Laskarin sets the laden shelf just above average eye level. He backs the presentation shelf with an extension of the aluminum plaque to apportion commemoration. The object and mass is charming and endearing in its roughness, the uneven texture, the bumpiness and incline. The metal melds together with the rocket while complementing the rocket form, stretches the irregularity. Its shelf support is exquisite. The construction, the flawless cutting, the petite screws with their precise placement and execution, the effect is as enigmatic as divine perfection.
Laskarin’s failed rocket is an analysis and interpretation of failure with an absence of deduction, a refusal to be hypothetical. There is no ‘what if’ in his assumptions or reckoning. He adduces the idea of failure, the fact of the molten artifact is evidence of his analysis. He stretches our visual horizon and we must strain to evaluate the material shape and configuration on display. We do assess his rocket and matter, whether it is indeed failure because failure is enticing, the admission of failure intriguing because it is a human proclivity. We wonder if the little rocket will fall over. Laskarin presents the consequence of failure, the cost of conquest. Rockets are for triumphs in space. failed rocket is a crooked bird, with anomalous residue on a perch. The consequence of failure is diminishment. The cost is detriment.
Intent to make a whole, faithful rocket, however small, presupposes there is a problem, if the attempt at creation of the intended object fails somehow. The issue and quality of the failure contributes to defining the goal by way of the failings of the piece, its blighted look, disturbance in the expectation of a mission or behavior as an enduring symbol because of its instability. Problems are great catalysts for revelation, motivation, ideas. Each aspect of failing can generate all kinds of possible new developments. Yet Laskarin chose to place the failure as deliberate conclusion, a testament to failing. The end result, although incidental or accidental, is an inspired result. There is nothing wrong with failure. Failure is the object, objectified. failed rocket elevates us, transporting us to a heightened awareness of failure’s tenure as a enduring fact. With a boost, the homely, unpretentious casting asserts perspective. The gruff reconsidered, it becomes a heartening upshot, an experience to be sanctioned since failure can be a soaring enterprise.
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for a broken tree - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
~photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin
As scientist Sheldon H. Geller explains, “scientific research cannot prove anything…it disproves error.” By contrast, the perceptive artist learns how to repeat and magnify his errors in order to create his own distinctive style for sharing new truth.
ABC of Prophecy: Understanding the Environment, Barrington Nevitt, 1985, pg. 77
Preserved on a shinny blood red square, a trio of precisely executed inspection gadgets hold a leafless broken branch preserved in ecru gummy material giving the surface an uncomfortable coating, preserving the sticks with a viscosity resistant to drying forces. Twigs stretch beyond the sanguine shape, daring to challenge the influence of the flat, mottled surface. Clear of the inspection, twigging our interest as a declaration of life beyond science fascinates in this appealing challenge of discomfiting scrutiny.  We are drawn to the defiance of restraint. The inspection tools hold in lively alignment and seem to animate the struggle to hold the branch in place. for a broken tree indicates that Laskarin is offering his work as an intention towards, an offering for a broken tree.  He has us think about the correlation or relationship to brokenness as opposed to wholeness. Imperfection, split apart, incompleteness is examinable, with a tussle. Striving for autonomy under the duress of inspection allows defiance and independence from impassive scrutiny.
Being broken isn’t that bad and is only a small piece of the whole tree, does not destroy the tree. Laskarin’s work explicates the fight from oppressive enquiry, and ascertains severing the branch might be a way to point to a divergence that is on an adjacent, imagined reference point. This work is a hopeful reframing of the self-preserving veneer to hide and necessity of acknowledging the usefulness of imperfection. This may not be an olive branch, but the work wrestles with the undertaking of examination, titling the work as a peace offering for the endeavour of breaking and critically studying the tree part. Laskarin shares with candor his awkwardness experienced through his exploratory process. He displays his cheerful confidence that examination is vital (bold red ground), and even sanguinary (exactitude of the holding arms), while acknowledging the source of his discoveries with deference (title), allowing the escape of the branch to pass beyond the safe, articulate space of the square. A tree might be broken, but in it is not ruin.
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for an uncertain support - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
~photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin

Our thinking tends to circle around established conventions whose basis is forgotten or obscure. Nietzsche proposed that the attainment of knowledge requires a ‘solid, granite foundation of ignorance’ for its unfolding: ‘the will to knowledge on the foundation of a far more powerful will: the will to ignorance, to the uncertain, to the untrue! Not as its opposite, but – as its refinement!’
~ 2012: The Return of Quetzalcoatl, Daniel Pinchbeck, 2006, Jeremy P. Tarcher/Penguin, New York, pg. 3
Poured epoxy resin evokes translucent smoothed ragged glass, is forward of a flat, silky but slightly impatient muriatic acid treated aluminum foundation. The deleterious, caustic agitation peeks through the resin pour of the lucid, undulating scrim. The grounds support a centrally secured forlorn, difficult and sincere “r” cast entity with its bottom speared with dense grey epoxy, heart shaped.  The splodging is high relief, realizing the value of and releasing invigorating spontaneity. A square, diminutive shield is screwed in the lower right corner a little unevenly just off the construct asserts intellectual obligation, balances the work with a dripping line of epoxy on its top, a gestural stripe.
Laskarin confounds assumptions about what support is, what uncertainty is and how they interplay in for an uncertain support. The combined aluminum/resin ground layering with the top torn surface incomplete depends on the metal divulging a willful substantiation below. The metal allows the resin to articulate whimsy, the wavy edging of the folio stubbornly unruffled. We cannot define the focal point in this work. It is the inscrutable stronghold of not knowing. Without the mysterious, strange, unspecified protuberance at the centre of Laskarin’s sculpture, an excrescence, anything that grounds - exacting aptness, discerning clarity is lacklustre, monotonous, imposes but in an insubstantial fashion - giving but a nod to the empirical, the logical as the wonky patch fixed in the lower right. It doesn’t fit well, overhangs but must be present, just because it is a consideration in grounding.  The mass, seemingly sticking out from the ground ends up grounding all the rest, enhances all other considerations, cultivates heartfelt elementals. Laskarin gives credence to, and tenders uncertainty as the quirky, endearing initiate of reflection, a willful codicil.
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for the passing of years - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
~ photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin
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for the passing of years - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
In all the cities of the world, it is the same. The universal and modern man is the man in a rush (i.e. a rhinoceros), a man who has no time, who is a prisoner of necessity, who cannot understand that a thing might perhaps be without usefulness; nor does he understand that, at bottom, it is the useful that may be a useless and backbreaking burden. If one does not understand the usefulness of the useless and the uselessness of the useful, one cannot understand art. And a country where art is not understood is a country of slaves and robots.
~Notes et Contre Notes, Eugene Ionesco, pg. 129
A 20 year old bunch of carrots, a cluster of very dry vegetables dominates for the passing of years. Offside, a suspended family heirloom, a 1930s wooden top is suspended with strapping that might harness aircraft wiring, a staunch binding, an unwillingness to ever let go of the momento. The top plumbs like a stopped time piece pendulum. The posey of veg roots dance, relief at their liberation from 2 years in an abandoned crisper, and their subsequent 18 year stint on the studio shelf awaiting Laskarin’s inspiration for their use.  His application, the pairing of unassuming and discordant items, illustrates how he can take advantage of the transitory to explain the futility of discomfort at time passing because, although long left and nearly forgotten, a bunch of dried carrots and a toy can be a focus within a new, haptic space, immersing us in the reciprocity that what might have been may touch us differently than what might be or is within this playful abandon. Laskarin touches us with serendipity. Behind the main structure plate is a slide, moving the scenario forward and backward, allowing time to reconfigure.
Laskarin celebrates objectivity, detachment that is interdependent with subjectivity, a predisposition of the artists’ love of “objecthood”. We can assess objects he displays with acuity and insight, he objectifies time passing through phenomenon of desiccation, disuse, wearing, the judicious stop of a top. We bring a subjective consideration to this palpable contrast. Material realities juxtaposed bring us affectionately to embrace his poetic celebration of time passing.
for the passing of years explores complacency about the ordinary, the ordinariness of time. Laskarin utilizes the unassuming as a source of time’s presentment.   The work demonstrates how passing of time can activate the serendipity of conjuncture.  He employs unpretentious bunch and bob to wield memory’s subservience in the insubstantial continuum called time. The items together are revivified, and play within ineffectual memory, temporizing our presumptions about disuse and uselessness. Redefining memory’s inferences and oddities come together to root derivation, plumbing the qualities of effects, references to humanity. Laskarin puts a spin on the ambiguous, fleeting nature of time and plays with the inexactitude of cursory assumptions.
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for Chartres - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
~photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin

Beauty, like loving, sometimes seems a kind of crisis. It brings us to the crossroads and thresholds of the perpetual choosing. Immediacy thus impels us.

The recognition of beauty is part of the soul’s flow.
Mystic Trudeau: The Fire and the Rose, B.W. Powe, Thomas Allen Publishers, Toronto, Ontario, 2007. pg. 215
Gold leaf on heat formed plastic, aluminum sheeting with an acid stain, screws observing the whole. for Chartres is so much more than a sum of its parts. The gold form is ecstatic, the stain weeps. The screws eye you. In conversation with the author, Laskarin recounted how he and his family heard Mozart’s Requiem in rehearsal in the Chartres Cathedral, and with his daughter scaled the North spire. Bernini’s folds come alive in this work. It’s Deleuze’s fold: ‘from the fold of our material selves, our bodies - to the folding of time, or simply memory’. ([1])
The gold billows wondrousness. Raised from the platter, the awe becomes factual, the truth about the experience of beauty. The adjacent stain is the crisis of knowing, the instability of dwelling on the sublime. Laskarin willingly surrenders to the swell of excruciating perfection, eminence that is impossible to sustain but ever cultivates and coats future considerations. The work is a requiem for aspirations held dear and their treachery, an elegy for waking to loveliness, manifest and culpable, allowing intensity to be residue for continuation.
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for the briefness of flight - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
~ photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin
The stereotype of the bohemians as jolly fornicators, roisterers and barflies is superficial because it completely ignores the significance of Excess. If Bohemia was a journey as well as a destination, it was a journey in the dark to a land of danger as well as pleasure. It promised a path along the edge of a precipice, and it was impossible to know in advance whether that path led to revelation or madness, triumph or oblivion. The point of Excess was ultimately not self-gratification, but self-discovery, or sometimes self-destruction, as Baudelaire expressed it, ‘a taste for the infinite.’ The deadly sin of Bohemia was not Lust or Gluttony, but Hubris – the pride of Daedalus, who courted death by daring to fly.
Bohemians, The Glamorous Outcasts, Elizabeth Wilson, Rutgers University Press, New Brunswick, New Jersey, 2000, pg. 195
In his book, Abstraction and Utopia Now and Then Reader LLC, Nov 15, 2011, Chapter 111, Hilton Kramer quotes Tatlin:  “A revolution strengthens the impulse of invention.” With respect for Vladimir Tatlin’s, Corner Relief (1915)for the briefness of flight examines a revolutionary precept far from the Russian Revolution’s need to revolutionize social disparity and affect a new world sensibility. Laskarin’s insurgency is his internal analysis, infiltrating and advancing his complex sensibilities about change. He excises the introspection for our reflection. Laskarin’s helicopter pilot career brevity, his response to that career and his resulting views regarding his career change is likely central to the work’s traits, its arrangement, positioning, and delivery.
Centrally secured with more scientific examination apparatus, Laskarin designates a found and empty hummingbird nest to the forefront of his work, high so one can barely see into it, reminding us of the hummingbird’s relation to helicopters and that seeing into other’s privileged sanctuaries is a defiance of privacy, although Laskarin allows this although we must strain to achieve the altitude necessary. The empty nest has lost its original purpose, is desolate, grows lichen. The lower nest is spackled with harsh yellow plastic material used to insulate tool handles is the application of the excess of reinforcement, rewarding and punishing. The violence to the nest confuses the idea of preciousness and reinforces the integrity of the papery husk with vehement insistence.
Behind the fore, Laskarin layers clarity with the opaque, translucence with cloudiness. A curved horizon of clear plexi window, harkening a helicopter cabin window exposes what is a conglomerate of allusions to helicopter engineering, aircraft substance. Backgrounds intersects horizontality and verticality. The far ground is tampered with, crimped, bent, bearing the evidence of incident. The middle ground, softened with acid is spare, defending the damage behind it as the caustic action is mitigated with time.  Vertical, sandwiched metal crosses with the widened plexi horizontal. Interceding, Laskarin mediates the safe place (nest) and dangerous space (ground) with the transformative plexi view that is handsomely secured by smartly contrived steel clips. The emblematic nest provokes, reflecting on the curvature every which way, together with those poking holding arms. The ground verticality incites and disquiets accountability’s hold on rationality.
for the briefness of flight is about the invisibility of a personal journey. The work is about remembering the daring to soar with what one initiates, discovers. It is about critically examining, assessing that which fosters and develops what one desires, the heights one is capable of and abandoning the secure refuge of nurture, demarking it as a dangerous place to land, a vulnerable return. Laskarin screws together reflection and retrospection. His work is concise as the abiding feat of flying is brief, but the tangents of assessment, the inspection arms are departure points to fly to new realms of finding, of sighting, of intention. He frames intrepid exploits with its dangerous fragility.
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found
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
~ photo courtesy Daniel Laskarin
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found - view 2
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found - view 3

“Now man that alto man last night had IT–he held it once he found–I’ve never seen a guy who could hold so long.” I wanted to know what “IT” meant. “Ah well” laughed Neal “now you’re asking me im-pon-de-rables – -ahem! Here’s a guy and everybody’s there, right? Up to him to put down what’s on everybody’s mind. He starts the first chorus, he lines up his ideas, people yeah, yeah, but get it, and then he rises to his fate and has to blow equal to it. All of a sudden somewhere in the middle of the chorus he GETS IT–everybody looks up and knows; they listen; he picks it up and carries. Time stops. He’s filling empty space with the substance of our lives. He has to blow across bridges and come back and do it with such infinite feeling for the tune of the moment that everybody knows it’s not the tune that counts but IT—” Neal could go no further; he was sweating telling about it.
~ On the Road: the Original Scroll, Jack Kerouac, 2007, Viking. Pg. 304
Lurking low, down, Laskarin’s two part work, found is sculpture that began as an idea found within something else that was left for a time in his studio. Time is utilized to determine what was once one thing is, with reconsideration, sustained evaluation, revamping, and then, presto-chango... Voila! Eureka! There it is. It is found.
found is a duality, the symmetry of validation and invalidation, the interchange between yes and no, what it is, and what it is not, here and there – on and off ad infinitum. The work is Gaudier-Brzeska’s mountainous sculptural energy, with the definition of masses by planes (sculptural ability). (‘Blast’, 1914) found can be pondered with Rosalind Kraus’ discussions of base/no base work, absorbing the base/ marker – logic/ontological absence – not-landscape/not-architecture. (Sculpture in the Expanded Field 1979, essay reprinted in Artists, Critic, Context by Paul F. Fabozzi p. 283-289)
One part of the cut and bent aluminum panels recurrence is on a flat rectangle, ostensibly a plinth, the other has been placed directly on the floor. Each echoing with one edge touching the surface underneath and the opposite part held up by posts - identical mirror images of each other back to back. The work on the floor seems larger. But it is the same. The low plinth isolates the work on it from the rest of the world. The work on the floor looks like it is in the world, living an existential existence. The part on the plinth feels ceremonially presented, paraphysical, a parody of itself.  foundcontains multiple contradictions.
Each looks like an abstracted bird folding its wings, birds’ beaks (origami), birds grounded – one on one off the jetty, and/or mantles of mortality. The parts look like architecture without the possibility of accommodation or shelter. Introverted, one needing the other and back to back each part of the work holds the other’s place. The on the plinth off the plinth stance gives definition, raises questions of why, and what does the here and there mean. We must look down, and stay looking down to sustain the view – across from other parts of the room isn’t enough. We encounter the process of finding concluding with the found. One comes to think of the lifting, cantilevered edges as a double peer and we must circumvent one peek to view the other. The work is demanding, compelling us to examine and re-examine. found requires we appreciate the complexity of metal folding from the sheered aluminum, the striking sexiness of surfaces. We are bound to meet the challenge of seeing each piece as exactly identical and we must test this questioning by walking around and around the work, seeing the raising, the formations, the shadows that enhance and perplex in their complication. We must rectify any presumptions about the pair being merely tipped metal objects, one on a metal rectangle.
The process of finding the fundamental nature of existence, advancement of comparisons within ourselves, echoing, the anticipation of unadorned disclosure, time arrested to allow the finding are all considerations within found. Barnett Newman named the presuppositions and foundations, and its extent and validity regarding ideas, aesthetic acts (art) that encompasses ideas as an epistemological paradox. He said the pure idea is ‘Not space cutting nor space building, not construction nor fauvist deconstruction; not the pure line, straight and narrow, not the tortured line, distorted and humiliating; not the accurate eye, all fingers, nor the wild eye of dream, winking; but the idea-complex that makes contact with mystery – of life, of men, of nature, of the hard, black chaos that is death, or the grayer, softer chaos that is tragedy. For it is only the pure idea that has meaning. Everything else has everything else.’ [2] Laskarin reveals shrouding and its deflection, double death incising with his multifaceted, lively mystery shadows with the chaos of either or, with the soft grey of tragedy, cut sharp and hard.  Laskarin finds it, and it is multipart, a compound, mirrors. It is in the nature of finding, it is found. He tags us, children in the game of hide and seek, looking for some (one) entity in the search for meaning - tag, you are it, too.
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stack - Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
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stack – detail – Daniel Laskarin.
fallen and found –Deluge 2014
Water jet cut layers, capably welded, sander ground, muriatic acid etched, stack stacks memory captures. Catching snaps of derelict places, abandonment, emptiness, incidental glances into anonymous existence, a hefty podium for chance detection and a revelation of urbanity, stack shelves a few photos for the public to finger, browse. We do reluctantly touch, with trepidation. stack is both self-important and significant, detaining us, holding us with this commitment to see what’s being stored without any direct or apparent indication that we might become or indeed be revealed as a photographic capture held for posterity, too. We might see ourselves, be seen, be held. More disconcerting, we might not be acknowledged, or more severely, removed from the stack.
Laskarin establishes a provision to view peripatetic discourse through the layering and informal retrieval of documented finding. His cachet, documents of found glimpses is an incessant endeavour. The repository establishes the weight of holding on to the storage of ubiquitous finding, setting up a provision for continuing existence, what is extant, although the views (photos) of the finding, what is found are interchangeable. The tranquil grey work presses with abstemious insistence to convene photographic responses. stack is grave, a subdued tribute to finding, once found arbitrarily shelved. Rendered with exactitude, stack shows the serious responsibility of holding onto the found.
This work is access to the weighing of fallen and found, an epitaph commemorating time’s residue. The upright time piece chinks equably, firmly registering gauging what can be found, keeping us from falling.

[1] http://subsol.c3.hu/subsol_2/contributors3/casconetext.html
[2] The Picture, Barnett Newman, New York, Betty Parsons Gallery exhibition catalogue, 1947. Reprinted in Theories of Modern Art, Herschell B. Chipp, University of California Press, 1968, pg. 550

[1] http://www.simonosullivan.net/articles/deleuze-dictionary.pdf
Daniel Laskarin
fallen and found
January 31 to March 8, 2014
Deluge Contemporary Art
636 Yates Street
Victoria, BC, Canada V8W 1L3
Review by Debora Alanna