BIG
January 25 - March 12, 2006
The
exhibition Big, curated by Patrick Mahon, features the works of six recent
MFA graduates from The University of Western Ontario in London.
What is
big? In this exhibition, it is a noun, an adjective and an adverb.
It is an elastic term which stretches in order to contain complexity;
modifies in order to make succinct; and acts as a reminder to viewers that,
first
and foremost, the works of artists such as those represented here draw
attention
to the nuances which inflect what is large and not so large to inform
our lives.
In the work of Steven Laurie, bigness seems to most readily refer to
the sounds made by the artist s hyper-masculinized, machine-based
sculptures. Laurie s work cannily posits big noises as powerful and capable
of
taking up a great deal of psychological space while also marking
a distance
between the producer and receiver that acts as a measure of mutual
vulnerability.
The works of Anna Barelkowska make viewers feel big as they hover
over a
collection of cool, island-like forms which are strewn in an elegant,
random formation on the floor of the gallery.
Some of the works in the exhibition invoke scale, whether large or small,
in a way that is intended to function metaphorically. In the work of
Kathleen Ritter the bigness of the artist s video projection of sites
within the
city of London makes viewers feel as if we are there -- and therefore
are more implicated in the subtly imagined performances Ritter proposes
for
the locations. Liz Phillips, whose paintings refer to the giant portraits
made by New York artist Chuck Close in the 1960's and after, includes
a small self-portrait which, through reference to her own earlier pieces,
appears as if it could be big -- but somehow does so using highly economic
means.
Demian Petryshyn’s video work reflexively depicts the artist himself
and his younger brother playing video games, and comments incisively
on the way in which various forms of popular culture make those whom society
deems to be big become, perhaps temporarily, undifferentiated from those
who are supposedly not big. Brendan Fernandes, whose work makes reference
to the overdetermining touristic impulses which influence our conceptions
of places of the other, such as various countries in Africa, reminds
us
of what it means to conceive of that continent as big. In Fernandes work,
the common notion of the bigness of Africa points to the reductiveness
of thinking about culture which tries to homogenize complex collections
into
simplistic entities.
(Excerpt from exhibition brochure essay by Patrick Mahon)