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Bob Matthews: Garden Ruin
Gregory Lind Gallery Garden Ruin--the third exhibition at Gregory Lind Gallery for London-based artist Bob Matthews--reflects his continued exploration of the natural world, civilization and technology. In his previous two shows, Matthews presented pictures in the form of "digital drawings" and "digital Cibachromes." Those glossy, computer-generated images revealed an assured, aseptic approach to landscape, complicating their depiction of natural, lived-in spaces. In Garden Ruin, he has taken a decidedly more organic and abstracted approach in presenting four oil and acrylic paintings on panel, three ink jet prints, and one lithograph. Matthews' adventuresome aptitude across different media suggests a restless fascination with the encounters between artistic materials and content: how they conflict and alter our understanding of one or the other. This exploration, in fact, seems to be the core of the show. Hanging Object (Vision), 2008; oil, acrylic, and varnish on wood; 36 x 23 in. His paintings in oil and acrylic make the most of the inherent qualities of each medium. In works such as Historical Elements (2007) and Hanging Object (Vision) (2008), thick dabs of old-looking oil paint are applied in a scattershot manner. Nearby, hard-edged, flat acrylic paint is used to describe more definitive forms: discs, orbs, wires, and wind chimes. An engaging tension is found between the atmospheric, hand-made effect of the oil paint and the hard-edged exactitude of the bright and opaque acrylic forms. Through exploring the essences and historical resonances of different media--in pitting them against each other on the same panel--one begins to see the wood grain and oil paints as stand-ins for the organic, natural world while the plasticity of hard-edged acrylics becomes symptomatic of our technologically inundated social condition. I didn't take the works to be necessarily "about" humankind vs. the natural landscape. Indeed, very little of this content is directly addressed. Rather, the works seem concerned with the potential for imbuing different artistic media with specified, metaphorical meanings around this conflict. Historical Elements, 2007; oil, acrylic, and varnish on wood; 36.25 x 23.25 in. Bob Matthews: Garden Ruin is on view at Gregory Lind Gallery through June 27, 2009. Full Disclosure: The author has also exhibited at Gregory Lind Gallery, most recently the solo exhibition All It Is in December 2008. Posted June 13, 2009 11:00 PM (485 words) « Letter to the Editor | Home | Intricacies of Phantom Content » |
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