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PAST
GALLERY EVENTS
BRONX RIVER
ART CENTER PRESENTS PILGRIMAGE
Curated by Grace Moon
SEPTEMBER 27, 2003 - NOVEMBER 1, 2003
This show examines the concept of pilgrimage both literally and figuratively
in a non-religious context. Pilgrimage presents ten artists from across
the US and the world whose work revolves around or redefines a destination,
an internal journey or the events of an external one. A pilgrimage is
a journey or trip undertaken with faith to a venerable destination. The
historic practice of pilgrimage is well documented. The Hijira retraces
Mohammed's eight-year journey of war and persecution from Medina to Mecca.
For the Catholics the "Stations of the Cross" retraces the steps Jesus
took on the day of his crucifixion. The circumambulation of Mount Meru
by Buddhists includes a full ritual at every step. This journey is filled
with hardship and conflict. In today's modern world, where does humankinds'
desire to make a life-affirming journey take place?
In some cases
it's the destination that's important as in Lizzi Scott's "bathroom coverings."
Lizzi's work revolves around making silk floor dressings for different
bathrooms in New York, filled with gold trimmings and satin linings. This
recalls the devotion paid to Indian statuary, which is regularly outfitted
in garments, flowers, bathed, fed and cared for. It is understood that
the deity is alive in the stone, metal or porcelain form which its fashioned.
Dread Scott,
known for his controversial "flag burning" performance on the steps of
the White House in the early 90's, focuses on location. His works talk
about where things happen and to whom, as well as to the historical and
social significance of it. It's these kinds of socially charged places
of conflict that become destinations of Pilgrimage. Los Angeles painter
Billy Keane derives short poignant messages about society from his subjects
who come from the streets of Los Angeles. Billy's paintings of poor immigrants
and other marginalized members of our society are a confrontational look
at the hopes and dreams of those who have searched for fortune in the
"Home of the Free."
Photographer
Felicia Megginson's subject matter is her own shadow. She has documented
her shadow in places around the world such as Mexico, Italy, and her neighborhood
of Brooklyn. Her works document a kind of spirit traveling through the
world on its life's journey. Video / Installation artist Stephanie Dinkins
uses her surroundings to elucidate mundane environments. She reacts to
what would otherwise go unnoticed by the common eye. In doing so Stephanie
unveils the historical narrative that lies beneath the surface.
Eugene Miller
creates drawings made up of tiny dots with .05 ink-drafting pens. His
work takes long intense focus on a repetition of dots moving in concentric
patterns. This process for him is a meditation, an arduous, disciplined
practice. German artist Margitta Zachert uses architectural shapes drawn
and painted directly on the wall. Her wall murals create tension between
belief and knowledge- the very components of a pilgrim's journey. Sue
Scott uses the "craft" of weaving and knitting to express ideas of journey.
Using these simple forms as a metaphor for historic journey and personal
quest.
Installation
and sound artists Jacqueline Baum and Michal Fischer use the human body
as a vehicle to express bodily sensations such as weightlessness, deep
meditation, and claustrophobia, in a kind of dream world akin to a pilgrim's
state of mind in performing sacrifices at a holy site. Austrian artist
Alexandra Gredler has created her own painting language filled with colorful
anthropomorphic forms that inhabit equally mysterious worlds. Her paintings
are an imaginary journey in which the artist and the viewer explore this
unusual universe.
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