Emphasis on Digital
No, it's not just pushing a button
Affable local artist Alvey Jones is an alert magpie. His works
in the Washington Street Gallery's current show of digital art
include cloth from Jo-Ann Fabrics, wood preservative from Stadium
Hardware, a wood mat from Hollander's, scavenged fence wood,
Shrinky Dinks inspired by his children's use of them, and such
quotidian scroungeables as crayon stubs, marbles, keys, coins,
buttons, a broken jackknife, and a cowrie shell.
Jones feeds much of it through his Epson 2200 printer, which has
a "flat feed" that can accommodate unusual materials such
as plywood, cloth, or the Hollander's mat. He gets a huge kick
out of experimentation, confessing he's been tempted to feed
"rocks and aluminum" through the apparently indestructible
printer.
His eye-catching assemblage Previews of Coming Attractions
contains a blurred sepia scene from the movie To Kill a Mockingbird
showing Boo Radley and Scout on a porch swing, digitally printed
on a tiled set of twenty rectangular Shrinky Dinks. Beneath the
scene is a box containing everyday objects, sealed in clear plastic
wood preservative, that allude to key moments in the film. The
title is an inside joke: Jones's upcoming show, also at WSG,
will be a series of similar movie-inspired artworks.
The intricacy of digitally printing twenty Shrinky Dinks with
fragments of image, and the equally demanding efforts of Michelle
Hegyi, another artist represented in the show, put to rest the
stereotype of digital art as an easy out. Hegyi, who's been
experimenting with computer-generated art since 1984, says she
spends more time on her digital works than on paintings, because
with the former there's "the possibility of making it
perfect." Her large, tranquil prints, from the series The Shape
of the Sky, show cool blues overlaid with crayony textures and
paintlike strokes in yellow and brown. Some of her works include
encaustic, an overlay of beeswax that imparts a gentle, warm opacity
to the images.
Lynda Cole also uses encaustic in a vertical series of three
creamy, foggy works (above) that depict a wiry nest containing
mysterious glyphs, a series of blurry smoke ring-halos, and a
swirling sphere of geometric lines.
In contrast to these dreamlike works, local bookbinder Barbara
Brown's mathematical paper sculptures transform digitally printed
paper into intricate, origami-like books. Her work Disambiguation:
Notification of Possible Occurrence resembles a silvery, pointy
accordion imprinted with images of nails borrowed from a friend's
sketch.
Martha Keller creates art on a Wacom tablet with a stylus-a sort
of Etch-a-Sketch on 'roids. A former U-M adjunct art professor,
she says she finds herself applying many of the principles she used
to drum into students' heads to her new pursuit of digital art.
Her work Lake M/Aqua shows swaths of soothing acrylic-like turquoise
surmounted by pink watercolor-like brushstrokes.
The works are on display through September 11.
-Laura Bien
[Review published September 2005]
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