Jim Campbell “New Work”

Hosfelt Gallery

poster for Jim Campbell “New Work”

This event has ended.

Jim Campbell’s tenth exhibition at Hosfelt Gallery continues his examination of the liminal space of perception, where data becomes image and light becomes material. As a unique embodiment of Campbell’s engineering and film-making backgrounds, his art is consistently at the forefront of the development of the genre of new media. His newest body of work breaks ground in its expansion into full-color LEDs and new sculptural formats.

Campbell’s earliest LED works, shown in the 2000 exhibition Color By Number at Hosfelt Gallery, consisted of full-color LEDs. These first, small works served as a fertile foundation upon which Campbell could experiment with translating appropriated or original video footage into extremely low-resolution formats. But the works that followed typically involved a single color of LED - either red or white - as Campbell investigated the reduction of information to the borderline of recognition.

In this exhibition Campbell returns to the realm of full-color. Two works that are part of his ongoing Home Movies series deploy four-color LEDs, turned toward the wall (away from the viewer), to depict vintage footage capturing the significant moments in the lives of anonymous families, prior to the advent of video and before recording devices became quotidian. Viewed in low-resolution Technicolor, the birthdays, holidays and vacations become universal, turning anonymous records of the past into evocative and expressive repositories of our own personal memories.

Other works incorporate carved, semi-transparent resin ‘screens’ in an extension of Campbell’s Reconstruction series. In these newest iterations, the resin is a sculptural equivalent of the image depicted by the LEDs. The light is distorted as it passes through the varied thickness of the resin, creating the unsettling effect that the object itself is in motion.

Additional works stem from Campbell’s Exploded View series by exploring new three-dimensional formats, including multiple flat panels mounted at varying distances from the wall, and topographic arrangements of LEDs.

As ever-present technology distances us from sensation and contemplation, Campbell uses technologies developed for information transfer and storage to bring us back to the fundamental human experiences of perception and memory.

Media

Schedule

from September 06, 2014 to October 18, 2014

Opening Reception on 2014-09-06 from 16:00 to 18:00

Artist(s)

Jim Campbell

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