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'Aesthetic Sneezes,' Lisa Falco, Artsmedia Magazine. 10 15 02 [Montserrat College of Art]
I might have been entering a laboratory or a clean room: the large rectangular space was perfectly white, brightly lit, and the gentle whir of the air conditioning units subsumed the noise of the outside world. Here was the perfect environment for an experiment of shifting size and perspective. There were small specimens under glass, large contraptions suspended from the ceiling and sheets of white matte paper like aerial maps painstakingly pinned to the white wall. Was I in some sort of a nano-lab or computer chip manufacturing plant? Ought I to be wearing a HAZMAT suit? Had I, like Alice, unwittingly fallen into a wonderland of space and time?
Not exactly.
Actually, I had entered the Montserrat Gallery in Beverly to see an exhibit entitled "Distillation," featuring artists Doug Bosch and Hannah Burr, curated by Laura Donaldson. Clearly there is an experiment chronicled within these walls, though not a scientific one, per se. Rather, in "Distillation" artists Bosch and Burr reveal the evolutionary process of discovery in art: they show the incremental steps they have each taken in exploring both the limits and possibilities of their repsective art forms.
No HAZMAT suit is needed to view this exhibit, though allergy sufferers should potentially beware, because Bosch works with an unlikely material in his sculpture: refined and unrefined pollen. Yes, it's the same powdery susbstance that frosts the glass of automobiles and cascades over the surfaces of ponds and lakes in our own neighborhoods, but Bosch manages to mix and manipulate large amounts of it into unusual and surprisingly striking forms. under glas, curator Donaldson has arranged "Drop Studies," threads dipped in vegetable cellulose, then refined pollen, and later arranged like chains with dainty golden pendants at a jewerly counter.
In "Grains,"which is alo under glass, oversized yellow-green olives of pollen are pinned (though not wriggling) in systematic rows. In these "grains" the pollen is so fine and is fused so precisely that the forms look like delicate meringue confections. It's a good thing that they are under glass, because as odd as it sounds, the temptation to pop one onto the tongue and experience that texture is great. To the right of the glass case are still larger forms arranged in the open air, created by mixing pollen with water, shaping the resulting clay, and allowing the pieces to dry. One looks like a muffin top newly emerged from a baker's oven, a smooth surface with cracks and crevices where it has begun to split. Another rectangle of pollen looks like a mud brick or sponge laid out to dry.
Though most of the pieces appear quite solid, they are clearly not meant to be handled, and could conceivably be turned to dust in a pair of palms.
Having experimented with these smaller-scale scultpures in pollen, the remainder of pieces in Bosch's portion of the exhibit focus on large-scale works. One of these works, "Slabs," consists of fifty or more rectanglular slabs of pollen piled into windswept dunes on top of a white table. These slabs of pollen are pretty large - perhaps the size of a slice of toast - and though their surfaces are incredibly smooth, many of them are riddled wiuth cracks that developed during the drying process, demonstrating the fragility of Bosch's medium. Another remarkable piece is Bosch's nine foot long bundle of "Pollen Rods," suspended from the ceiling. Here many threads have been dipped in pollen and allowed to dry, as in candle-making, where the wick is dipped repeatedly in wax. The threads were then gathered together, like a ponytail, and suspended from the ceiling.
Having been left alone in the gallery, I was able to satisfy my urge to stroke this golden hair by blowing ever-so-gently on the rods and watching them sway, separate, and swing back into alignment.
Fortunately, they remained in tact and my desire to touch the remaining pollen scultpures, such as the rope-like, "Rod Pile," and silicon, "Disc Pile," was temporarily appeased.
Dominating the other half of the white room are the mixed media scultpures, paintings and drawings of Hannah Burr. Among them are the large, aerial, map-like sheets of paper, "Frontier 1" and "Frontier 2," that caught my eye when I first entered the sterile room. In these pieces, displayed edge to edge in one of the corners of the room, a blue chalk horizon line extends across each page, and clusters of graphite marks among solitary lines seem to indicate areas of concentration and emptiness in an alien landscape.
Curiously, there is evidence of repetition and experimentation in Burr's work, as well as Bosch's. In several of her pieces there is a figure of an unfolded architectural frame that reappears in drawing after drawing. It is outlined in graphite sketches, pale blue ink, and royal blue paint and resembles a chain of unfolding lawn-chair frames - the haunting blue prints of a new space station perhaps. Doubtless, the prototype for this figure appears in various stages of its evolution in the three stacked and banded piles of "Draw Through It" as well. Here, Burr has collected her sketches and doodles on bits of scrap paper and junk mail into three piles and bound them together with rubber bands. These freestanding stacks literally and figuratively document Burr's scientific method of production. With its emphasis on the process by which a set of results is obtained, this piece might also be titled, Show Your Work."
Some of Burr's work is notably different in the way it incorporates color. In "Yellow # 1" for example, the lawn-chair framework is present, but it has been filled in with a deep yellow paint. The gesture tranforms the frame into what looks like the body of a puppet, its limbs suspended from strings extending beyond the top of the canvas, which is actually a piece of wood.
Her most recent works, three dimensional table maps from the "Drape" series concentrate more on the tactile experience of planar forms, though they incorporate several elements from her earlier works. The "drape" pieces look like
tarps formed into mountain ranges, coated in matte white enamel. They are reminiscent of topographical maps that reveal geologic forms via texture and shape. Dotted with tiny nobs of green or yellow paint, the "Drape" pieces especially appeal to the viewer's sensation of touch. Having anticipated this, Burr has included a sample of folded, enamel-dipped paper in her guest book, so that it may be handled, examined, and transported about the room.
In "Distillation," curator Laura Donaldson displays the actual distillation process that occurs in the works of Doug Bosch and Hannah Burr. Within the clean white confines of the Montserrat Gallery, exhibit-goers witness a development and purification of art forms in a deliberate, methodical and experimental journey of discovery. Bosch's pollen scultpures evolve from small specimens into wonderfully large, bee's-eye-view configurations.
Meanwhile, Burr's enamel-dipped drawings and doodles emerge as the blueprints for her latest three-dimensional table-top scultpures - tactile landscapes of the imagination as viewed from an undisclosed distance above.
-Lisa Falco
ArtsMedia
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