CHRIS DOROSZ
Passing Through
November 15 to January 18, 2009
Chris Dorosz began to regard the primacy of the paint drop, a form that
takes shape not from a brush or any human-made implement or gesture,
but purely from its own viscosity and the air it falls through, as analogous
to the building blocks that make up the human body (DNA) or even its
mimetic representation (the pixel). With this in mind he has been working
towards creating a narrative of materials as the groundwork to explore
changing ideas of human physicality in an age pushing towards virtual
reality.
Passing Through includes new works from Dorosz’s stasis project.
What at first appear to be small sculptures of figures between plates
of plexiglass reveal themselves upon further examination to be paintings.
Responding to the techniques of digital animation, Dorosz has constructed
a field of transparent rods, upon which he has painted figures, not simply
by creating the illusion of depth, but by actually reconstructing the
depth-of-field. The figures are painted from all sides, so that they
stand suspended in the room, somewhere between the concrete reality of
sculptural objects and the spectral illusion of holograms. Through the
viewer’s movements in aligning and de-aligning these pixel-like
paint drops, full body portrait forms materialize and dematerialize.
In the centre of the Gallery Dorosz will suspend a much larger piece
titled ‘veneer’. Differing slightly in technique from the
stasis series, splotches of paint cling to a forest of vertically strung
monofilament to recreate a to-scale piece of furniture – a Georgian
Highboy chest of drawers.
Dorosz’ work emphasizes the beauty and tangibility of paint itself,
which he considers a metaphor for human physicality. The works in the
show highlight the tenuous nature of the physical world where, at any
moment, life as we know it might just collapse into a pool of droplets
or drift upwards into the astrosphere. The title of the exhibit ‘passing
through’ underscores an impulse of transcendence in the work but
also as a nod towards the vertical lines that pass through or fracture
the figure.
Chris Dorosz was born in Ottawa in 1972 and raised in Winnipeg. He
studied at the Concordia University in Montreal (BFA) and the Nova Scotia
College of Art and Design (MFA). Since 2000 he maintains a studio practice
in San Francisco where he teaches at the Academy of Art University. Dorosz
is represented by the Leo Kamen Gallery (Toronto) and the Mayberry Gallery
in Winnipeg.

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