An alternative portrait: Beyond the physical form
2011
The concept of An Alternative Portrait was derived from a long-standing fascination with
the human body's interior configurations and the potential of these to evoke the
essence of individuality and bodily presence (or portrait). My objective is to capture
ideas of self and embodiment through experiential and emotive marks and transitions
expressed within broad fields of colour. My investigation references both loosely
arranged and tightly constructed abstracted patterning evident in formally structured art
and the apparent human need for visual order that pattern provides.
A survey of artists who look beyond literal representations of the human form and
natural processes commenced with the work of Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky. Klee
observed pattern and cyclical rhythms in nature supplemented with linear motion and
vertical extension, while Kandinsky used the human form as a starting point to
demonstrate pure abstraction. Ideas expressing individual spirituality can be found in the
work of Barnett Newman and Mark Rothko.
The capacity of representations of invisible natural processes to extend our
understanding of human minutiae is evident in the work of Christine Borland who
documents decay, and Susan Derges who captures natural cycles in photograms. Other
artists who use forms of pattern to express abstracted natural processes include Anne
Morrison and Catherine Woo. Both engage the natural world in observations of
underlying processes, structures, and natural rhythms and exhibit qualities that I attach
to the human body. Chuck Close employs a complex form of patterning in a systematic
approach that is abstract yet superreal. A strong attachment to process is referenced in
Steffen Dam's exquisitely structured organic forms suspended in glass and in the
materiality of Dale Frank's abstract portraits. The media I chose to express An Alternative
Portrait delivers luminous qualities evident in the atmospherics of Janet Laurence's
installation aesthetic and Antonio Murado's colour-fields.
Significant sources of ideas about pattern are E H Gombrich and Kent Bloomer. The
indexical natures of perception and awareness as these relate to phenomenological
ideas of body, self, embodiment, to communicating subjective experience, and to a
contemporary concept of the sublime are examined with reference to Emmanuel Kant,
Barnett Newman, Billy Collins, Mark Johnson, Francois Pluchart, David Peat, Drew Leder,
Tracey Warr, and Maurice Merlot-Ponty.
An Alternative Portrait invites new readings of the body as a site of physical and
imagined presence. I leave an audience to its own associations giving primacy to a
subjective interpretation.
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