“Woods, Lovely, Dark, and Deep” Exhibition
DC Moore Gallery
This event has ended.
DC Moore Gallery presents its summer group exhibition, Woods, Lovely, Dark, and Deep, curated by John Zinsser. This show juxtaposes historical and contemporary painters and photographers as a way of re-thinking “landscape” and its associated meanings. Zinsser began with an intuitive notion, looking at artists for whom this representational genre allows a revealing of hidden places or psychological foreboding. For many, illusion is played against literal reality, whether in terms of paint physicality or received photographic treatment of subject matter.
The tensions between nature as observed and its metaphorical role are heightened as we move forward in a modernist trajectory, starting with examples from Charles Burchfield, Romare Bearden and Fairfield Porter. Milton Avery, April Gornik and Jake Berthot all developed their work alongside the ascendency of formalist abstraction, and fully respond to the objectivity of that language. Photographers Duane Michals, David Hilliard and Noriko Furunishi take the historical tradition of plein air painting and invert its meanings, summoning fictive narrative fantasies through factual encounters. A younger crop of painters—including Max Jansons, Liz Markus, Daniel Heidkamp, Claire Sherman and Sissel Kardel—return landscape to the realm of the sublime and fantastic, with a range of inventive and unorthodox strategies.
[Image: Claire Sherman (b. 1981) “Stumps and Twigs” (2012-13) Oil on canvas, 78 x 66 in.]
Media
Schedule
from June 20, 2013 to August 15, 2013
Opening Reception on 2013-06-20 from 18:00 to 20:00
Artist(s)
Eric Aho, Milton Avery, Romare Bearden, Dozier Bell, Jake Berthot, Katherine Bowling, Charles Burchfield, Mary Frank, Noriko Furunishi, April Gornik, Marsden Hartley, Daniel Heidkamp, David Hilliard, Mark Innerst, Max Jansons, Sissel Kardel, Alex Katz, Whitfield Lovell, Liz Markus, Chris Martin, Duane Michals, Joan Nelson, Fairfield Porter, Lucas Reiner, Claire Sherman, Chuck Webster