SYNTHETIC

Synthetic is a vibrant, colorful and thought provoking group show featuring six artists whose work interprets the notion of “synthetic” in a variety of ways and mediums.  Each artist brings to the show a unique consideration of color, material, content, and composition.

Shane McAdams' scenic paintings are titled Synthetic Landscapes.  The romantically painted, vast landscapes at the center of his imagery are reminiscent of awe-inspiring Hudson River School paintings, as well as whimsical tourism postcards. McAdams then fills the surrounding canvas with invading abstract forms that suggest the unseen cellular make up of these landscapes, whose electric colors bring into question the chemical composition of these beautiful vistas.  Some of the works present bright streaks of color emanating vertically from the horizon line, as if revealing radiating waves of light otherwise invisible to the human eye.
 
Similarly, the work of Elizabeth Gahan explores the fusion and divergence of natural and man-made environments.  With a focus on architecture, Gahan both celebrates the creativity, ingenuity and beauty of the built environment, while using unnaturally vibrant colors and plastic gel mediums to bring into consideration the environmental and cultural impact of unsustainable development. Soft washes of color suggest an organic and free flowing beauty, while thick and shiny globs of acrylic paint visually seduce, much like the glossy finish of a sports car or lipstick from a high fashion photo. The plastic textures seem at odds with the images of beauty found in nature. What we see in the work is the often-improbable synthesis of nature and culture.
  
Susan Dory employs acrylic paint as a malleable, synthetic conduit of color, form and movement. Dory uses the plasticity offered by her medium to create hard edge, yet fluid shapes that at times seem to expand and contract on the canvas surface.  There is a paradox of movement and texture that intrigues the eye on a subconscious, as well as physical level as colors visually push and pull at one another.   Titles like Coupling and Corposant seem to suggest an exchange of energy and serve as another vehicle from which to enter these vast, abstract compositions.

Photographer and mixed-media artist Margeaux Walter combines real world observations of human interaction with fictional scenarios that portray nuanced vignettes of contemporary culture. Beginning each body of work by closely studying body language, facial expressions and human interaction, she is able to bring a variety of personalities with her into the studio, where they are broken down, recreated and performed by Walter herself.  She dons costumes, wigs and makeup to transform herself into these individuals and then photographs and digitally creates synthetic, artist-made scenarios. Walter’s finished works are 3-D lenticulars in which several separate interlacing images are laminated under a lenticular lens.  This unique process creates the visual effect of action and motion. Walter’s often-humorous scenes are surprisingly insightful and keenly perceptive.
 
Also creating synthetic, artist-made scenes is photographer, sculptor, installation and video artist Liz Hickok. Hickok begins with a Jell-O-like substance, manipulating this medium to build translucent, colorful, glowing scale models of urban sites, transforming ordinary architectural images into something truly ephemeral.  While exuding a jewel-like quality, the fragility of the gelatinous material points to the transitory nature of human artifacts.  The actual Jell-O installations mold and decay over time, leaving her photographic work as the only record of these synthetic cities and their fleeting existence.
  
Mixed-media artist Liz Tran creates collaged canvases that reinvent the natural forms of trees and branches through a lens of poetry, textile patterning, printmaking and panting. Her playful and vivid imagery stir the senses, drawing on the eye’s natural desire for color and pattern. Paint drips and flows freely while hard edge marks draw the viewer’s gaze throughout the hyper-activated surfaces. Wholly fantastical and synthetic, each image touches on an inner creativity that is whimsical, lyrical and completely unconstrained or bound by the natural world.

For more information, contact Megan Des Jardins at (206) 652 5855.

Susan Dory
Susan Dory
Coupling
2011
Acrylic on canvas over panel
56 x 60 inches


Susan Dory
Susan Dory
Blue Ribbon
2011
Acrylic on canvas over panel
60 x 56 inches


Elizabeth Gahan
Elizabeth Gahan
Observatory
2011
Watercolor, oil & acrylic on canvas over panel
30 x 36 inches


Elizabeth Gahan
Elizabeth Gahan
Overgrowth
2011
Watercolor, oil & acrylic on canvas over panel
30 x 36 inches


Liz Hickok
Liz Hickok
One Broadway, from the Jelly NYC series
2011
C-print
Edition: of 12
30 x 45 inches


Liz Hickok
Liz Hickok
Alamo Square
2004
C-print
Edition: of 12
30 x 40 inches


Shane McAdams
Shane McAdams
Synthetic Landscape 26 (Cyan Symmetry)
2010
Ballpoint pen ink, oil & resin on canvas over panel
36 x 36 inches


Shane McAdams
Shane McAdams
Synthetic Landscape 16 (Niagara)
2010
Mixed media on canvas over panel
64 x 64 inches


Liz Tran
Liz Tran
A Heaviness
2011
Mixed media on panel
48 x 48 inches


Liz Tran
Liz Tran
After Rain
2011
Mixed media on panel
48 x 48 inches


Margeaux Walter
Margeaux Walter
iphone Accident
2011
3-D Lenticular
18 x 24 inches


Margeaux Walter
Margeaux Walter
Vacay
2011
3-D Lenticular
30 x 40 inches