Artist Statement
Tuesday, July 5, 2016
Feature Artist: Robert Poormon
The
things I make and color are inspired by the meandering geometries and
controlled irregularities of nature. Nature is curved, textured, irregular; not
squared, radiused or planar. In her own way, then, nature shows the meandering
perfection of her forever-ness. Messy order. Precise approximate-ness. So
nature is not revealed in readily-apprehended lines so typical of usual human
design, but in the woven interplay, the layered functionality, the dynamic
complexity of her ongoing intentionalily. This layered richness is what I seek
somehow to iterate.
In these constructions, my
labored depictions, I do not much try to conceal my hand. Textures and colors
are made to be seen. “Perfection” is unlikely. Nature is rarely shiny.
Variations in surface and reflectance are part of what is sought: a
transcription of nature's rules of precise approximate-ness. Perfect
imperfection. Textural expressionism.
We are inundated with images.
Some have even accused the image of usurping the power of the word, and I think
for many of us it has. Images, photographs, illustrations, pictures. But a
picture of a tree is not a tree or the experience of being near a tree. We are
analog beings after all, for some time yet. “A picture is worth a thousand
words”, it's been said. I want to create work that might be worth at least a
couple of pictures.
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