LYN CARTER: Stretched
July 31 - September 19, 2010
Stretched is a genre-bending exhibit featuring hybrid mixes of sculptural
and textile works which take the items of everyday life and presents
them in an exhilarating new way.
Lyn Carter’s art is a sympathetic project of sorts: she revalues the overlooked,
unwanted and disposable objects that are a useful yet passive part of our everyday
routine by assembling them in new combinations. She embeds common objects in
brightly coloured fabric sheaths. They remain identifiable through their outlined
shapes, but partially hidden under these new skins. What results is not just
a reclaiming of the ordinary, but the construction of something completely unexpected.
Melding a contemporary aesthetic with mechanically produced materials, Carter
incorporates textiles into her work to bring her sculpture into another dimension,
creating something recognizable yet elusive, mundane yet extraordinarily imaginative.
But recognition of the familiar undercurrents which run through Carter’s
work is not a matter of simple observation. Her abstract forms are first met
with an air of ambiguity, challenging our expectations for textile art. Combining
a mastery of sewing and the use of provocative patterns, Carter’s fabric
becomes the skin of the objects beneath it. On one hand the objects are transformed,
losing all definitions. On the other hand we are compelled to look inside the
fabric for a hint of familiarity. Pieces such as Droplet and Swallowing Roses
certainly encapsulate this feeling; found objects and the skeleton of an antique
stool conjoin with intriguing patterns resulting in re-invention; a new life
form containing only a slight echo of what was. This juxtaposition between the
familiar and the faint creates a stimulating dialogue between subject and object,
inviting both interaction and interpretation.
Each of Carter’s creations is reminiscent of female tradition but with
a contemporary twist. The works are constructed out of material sometimes viewed
as feminized objects because they have their origins in domestic spaces. But
her creations are not domesticated at all. Their presence brings new life to
the places that they inhabit; they melt corners, defy gravity, and alter the
normal perspective of our daily environment. Carter’s combined use of textile
and sculpture is responsible for this impression. The rigor of her sculpture
clashes with the softness of fabric to create a welcome contrast between the
customary and the contemporary. It is as if the objects take on a life of their
own—deciding where and how they want to be; joining with other pieces,
adopting new colors and placing themselves in a more appropriate space. Hence,
the objects are removed from the space where we normally understand them, and
become something new, which thrives in the spaces and gaps between categories.
By dramatizing the ordinariness of simple material objects, Carter
shows us how to take the ordinary and mundane things that surround
us and engage with them on an entirely different level. Her creations
ignite curiosity and compel one to consider the relationships we have
with our own stuff. They make a moral statement regarding the significance
and meaning of these things in our lives. In Stretched, the commonplace
items which remain largely invisible within daily life brighten and
then ask for interpretation—perhaps suggesting that we pay more attention
to the things that we use and live with—to develop a more imaginative and
creative eye.

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