Thomas Condon
Liu Kincheloe
Sight
June 3–June 25, 2023
Opening reception Saturday, June 3, 3–5 PM
Artist discussion Saturday, June 17, 3–4 PM
A devotional pattern maker, creating “functional talismans” and a believer in the unreal, who makes photographs without a camera, present in Sight, a two-person exhibition featuring Liu Kincheloe and Thomas Condon.
Liu Kincheloe, Grandma Spider, 2023, oil on canvas, 50 x 54 inches
Liu Kincheloe
I relate ornament to an esoteric capacity referencing alchemical literature that often assigns families of correspondence, association, and meaning to familiar forms and natural elements. Making patterns feels like a devotional experience to me—the geometries that emerge in kaleidoscope reflection seem to have an elemental signature and reflect elemental characters. Local form, its placement, color, and numerical weight take on symbolic consideration—as works aspire to be functional sigils or talismans. Inter-relationship of form within pattern is special because adjacent forms co-create each other—positive form and negative space become interchangeable in daisy chain. In this way, a symmetrical pattern is a device to denote transcendence, and painting these designs is an act of embodying that relationship.
The structural bones of the paintings often start with a reflected motif that is unfolded in mirror symmetry—where new, unplanned forms appear in the axis of reflection. Symmetry expands the energy of that original motif or selection, and makes it readable, like a tarot card, and new forms are found and culled in this process. Wave patterns in nature have an obvious sense pattern derived from the system that created it, but each actual interval is actually irregular and difficult to mathematically determine and formulize. Similarly, I'm interested in a complicated and dense visual field with a sense of internal organization without the potential oppressiveness or implacability of rigid pattern, and so allows the pattern to give way to a sense organic movement or a sense of state change, animation, transformation, and liminality and space for the viewers to enter and relate. Ideally, the paintings have many visual pathways, like a body system and carry a sense of circulation, breath, meridians.
Thomas Condon, Parabolic Flight, 2014, metallic c-print, 40 x 30 inches
Thomas Condon
As a haptic artist, I am interested in exploring the limits of visual perception and the potential for transmutation of material through the creation of cameraless photographs. Specifically, I am fascinated by the phenomenon of pareidolia, which is the tendency for our minds to impose meaning and interpretation on otherwise nebulous stimuli. My relationship with identification through visual perception slips between fully believing in the unreal and questioning the real. Employing photographic material as the vehicle to navigate the space between these two polar experiences amplifies the human need for image recognition and demands a re-cognition of what potentially could be.
Using various tactile materials and techniques, such as burning, scratching, and embellishment, I create images that evoke a sense of familiarity yet remain abstract or otherworldly. I use unconventional materials as resists to mediate the paper’s response to light, heat and chemistry, inviting chance as a partner in authorship. The haptic experience of creating these images is essential to the process. It allows me to connect with the materials and develop a sense of physical intimacy with the art object.
Ultimately, my work is an invitation to explore the interplay between perception and imagination and to challenge the primary function of the photograph as a mode of documentation or image transmission. This collection explores the elasticity of photographic material and the flexibility of photographic identity.
Installation photography by Spencer House Studio