Kit Davenport's Artist Statement
CYNTHIA ELLEN HOOPER
STATEMENT ON ART ( 11/10/03 )
My intricate landscape paintings and drawings examine those marginal
or provisional places usually designated for bland functionality
or cast-about accumulation . Such sites include the environments
around industrial zones, vacant lots, and landfills. These ubiquitous
and often unassuming sites generate many formal and conceptual
contradictions—the familiar dialectic between nature and artifice,
for example, or between intention and entropy . Places like
these provide discrete refuge for our culture's myriad infrastructural
systems, but when happened upon, can also generate a subtle anxiety
about the safety and veracity of those systems. Ubiquitous cylindrical
storage tanks, for example, can be elegantly attenuated and even
archetypal—but may also enclose mysterious and possibly perilous
substances. Industrial brownfields left to lie fallow, likewise,
can be meditative and eerily uncanny—but also noxious sites bereft
of beauty and value.
My interdisciplinary projects similarly examine the interplay
between these sites' peculiar formal appeal and the more concrete
complexities of their social, political, and environmental condition.
Unearthing a site's (sometimes shadowy, sometimes amusing, always
interesting) stories make its morphology more comprehensible, and
its subtle details more compelling. Deploying documentary-style
photography and text-based research methods toward this aim—sometimes
alongside paintings and drawings—serves also to underscore the
dialectic between the presumed objectivity and "truthfulness" of
photography and the more obvious artifice of hand-made images.
Focusing on these types of places tends to problematize traditionally
held assumptions about landscape and landscape painting in particular.
Although terms like picturesque and sublime have
attended the definition of landscape since the eighteenth century,
Geographer J.B. Jackson asserts that yet earlier definitions emphasized
not the bucolic beauty of the land, but rather its mediation and
control. Jackson therefore posits a renewed definition for landscape ,
one that revisits its distant etymological past: a composition
of man-made or man-modified spaces to serve as infrastructure or
background for our collective existence . My pictures and projects
serve in part to illuminate this assertion.
|