2014 Storytellers (FLIPPINGBOOK)

Storytellers

STORYTELLERS

by Jeff Rau

Featuring artwork by Adonna Khare Patty Wickman Laura Lasworth Nathan Huff Siri Kaur Duncan Simcoe

The Earl & Virginia Green Art Gallery BIOLA UNIVERSITY 2014

Cover background image and page textures: Courtesy of Lost & Taken (lostandtaken.com)

Images of works by Siri Kaur and Nathan Huff provided by the artists; images of works by Laura Lasworth provided by Lora Schlesinger Gallery; used by permission.

All other documentation photographs by Jeff Rau, from exhibition in the Earl & Virginia Green Art Gallery.

Storytellers (exhibition catalog), by Jeff Rau Copyright © 2014 Earl & Virginia Green Art Gallery All rights reserved.

First Edition. Book design by Katelyn Seitz. Published through Issuu.com

Earl & Virginia Green Art Gallery Biola University Art Department 13800 Biola Ave., La Mirada, CA 90639 562.903.4807 • www.bit.ly/TheGreenGallery

No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher.

PREFACE

Stories play a critical role in our experience and understanding of the world. We share stories about where we’ve been that help us understand the past, and we shape our futures by creating aspirational stories about who we hope to be. We use stories to connect us to communities of others, and we tell stories that differentiate us from others and define an individual identity. At times these stories are rooted in fact, sometimes they are complete fictions, but perhaps most often we find them to be a strange amalgam of the two. Our fictions are shaped by real experience, built upon the foundations of truth, and our revered histories remain incomplete and colored by the specific experience of the author. Despite these inherent difficulties, story remains our most potent tool for making sense of the world. Though varied in their materials, practices, and subjects; all of the artists here share an affinity for visual storytelling. Some offer visual parables that are rich in references and metaphors intended to motivate us to respond. Others tell deeply personal stories, mining their own experience for tales of struggle and success, violence and beauty. And still others challenge our tacit acceptance of cultural narratives by recontextualizing familiar stories and exposing our subconscious assumptions. Though each of these stories is deeply rooted in the personal experience of its author, it is likely that in these pages you will also find familiar echoes of your own story.

- Jeff Rau, 2014

ADONNA KHARE

Adonna Khare’s large-scale pencil drawings feature animal protagonists in whimsical scenes that first call to mind common fables and morality tales; but her references are in fact much more personal. Facing an impending storm and often bearing the scars of previous struggles, the anthropomorphic figures gather as members of a supportive tight-knit community, seeming to both celebrate together while comforting one another. In fact, many of the figures represent friends and family of the artist, and this very personal visual journal chronicles the dynamic cycles of life in all its struggles and its triumphs.

Screaming Bear , 2013

untitled , 2013-14

Grizzly Bears , 2013

Polar Bears , 2013

PATTY WICKMAN

In a recurring Lenten practice, Patty Wickman alludes to the symbolic 40 day period of time in the Judeo-Christian tradition that is customarily a time of trial and testing but also of cleansing and rebirth. Purposefully exploring an alternative to the heroic scale and detailed planning of her usual studio practice, she is here constrained to examining the ordinary and often unremarkable experiences of daily life in quick paintings that must be completed within a day. Within such constraint, the paintings of 40 Days open up these fleeting moments and recast the ordinary as rich with beauty and imbued with a deep sense of spiritual significance.

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40 Days (Installation view)

1) 13 February: Face Print 2) 14 February: Palm Ashes 3) 15 February: Facing NE 28° (The City Below; Looking Out) 4) 16 February: Facing SE 244° (Retreat; Looking In) 5) 17 February: Bitter Sweet

10) 22 February: Hit and Run 11) 23 February: Placeholder 12) 25 February: Under Cover 13) 26 February: Legion 14) 27 February: Profusion of Bees

15) 28 February: Farewell 16) 1 March: Patty’s Palette, Clare’s Egg

6) 18 February: Journey (Past/Future) 7) 19 February: Disneyland, Rain, 10pm 8) 20 February: Opportunist 9) 21 February: News of Arthur McIrwin’s Birth

17) 4 March: Grey 18) 5 March: Fallen

19) 6 March: Clare’s Kitchen 20) 7 March: David’s Nametag

21) 8 March: Ooze 22) 9 March: Document of a Run 23) 10 March: Daylight Savings 24) 11 March: St. Joseph Table 25) 12 March: Black Smoke 26) 13 March: White Smoke 27) 14 March: Leah’s Hospitality 28) 15 March: Oak Pollen 29) 16 March: Play 30) 18 March: Francis

Through Stubble 33) 21 March: Tim’s Cup 34) 22 March: Poverty of Spirit 35) 23 March: Question 36) 24 March: Clare’s Palette, Drew’s Sugar Egg 37) 25 March: Fading Peach Blossoms 38) 26 March: All the Insects Seen While Painting Yesterday 39) 27 March: Asleep 40) 28 March: Passion Play Portrait 41) 29 March: Dump

31) 19 March: Be Opened! 32) 20 March: As Sparks

LAURA LASWORTH

Laura Lasworth’s paintings refer alternately to concrete locations, personal journeys, and a variety of visual, literary, and biblical sources. These works are mostly from a series of paintings entitled The Western Wall . Each scene is set in a consis- tently sparse landscape/seascape inspired by a view of Puget Sound from the artist’s former Seattle apartment. While functioning inde- pendently as brief allegorical tales, the works also serve collectively as a kind of self-portrait of the artist at- taching her oeuvre to a specific lineage of spatial and narrative influences.

Natural and Grafted Branches , 2001

Corporal Acts 1 , 2009 (Left) Looking at the Over Looked: A Portrait of George Tooker , 2009 (Right)

Two Shaker Chairs , 2004 (Below)

NATHAN HUFF

The characters in Nathan Huff ’s Tension/Intention paintings invariably find themselves pushed to the brink. Undoubtedly their impending failure or success is intended to serve as a moral lesson for us all, but the outcome is not precisely clear. In a concerted effort to reach unprecedented new heights, these figures have exhibited remarkable creative ingenuity and a fair dose of reckless ambition. Their work has lead them to a point of no return and the house of cards appears to be held together by sheer force of will. The paintings might easily be despairing, but instead we root for their continued success.

This is how it is , 2011

Bluster # 2, # 3, # 9, # 13 , 2013

Installation view

Wisdom Council on Work # 1, 2014

Wisdom Council on Work # 2 , 2014

Wisdom Council on Work # 1 & #2 , 2014 Installation view

SIRI KAUR

The images of Know Me for the First Time by Siri Kaur have a strange familiarity to them. The memory is vague yet unmistakable and this mysterious and intimate allure draws us in. But there is something amiss. Borrowing tropes and archetypes from a variety of sources throughout our common visual history - from classical painting to contemporary film - Kaur effectively highlights the subconscious manner in which every new experience is colored by our projections of prior narratives. The echoes of our own past continue to haunt the present.

Jamie, 2011 (left) Destroyed Room, 2011 (right)

Crow’s Field , 2011

Hawk, 2011 (left) Angela, 2011 (right)

DUNCAN SIMCOE

Caught 2 and Book Boys are part of a larger series of Black Paintings by Duncan Simcoe. These works appear to reference the continuing epic struggle between the Israeli and Palestinian people for control of disputed lands. On the surface we may see this as a contemporary struggle between two youths that we know to have vastly differing histories and conflicting worldviews, but the paintings also continually refer us back to the common origin of their stories in the Genesis nar- rative of Abraham’s two sons, Isaac and Ishmael, and God’s promise to make both sons into great nations.

Book Boys , 2006

Caught 2 , 2005

EXHIBITION CHECKLIST

Adonna Khare Screaming Bear , 2013 Pencil and carbon pencil on paper 92” x 36”

Laura Lasworth Two Shaker Chairs , 2004 Oil on wood panel 11” x 16.5” Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery

Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery

Adonna Khare untitled , 2013-14 Carbon pencil on paper 93” x 36” Courtesy of the artist Adonna Khare Grizzly Bears , 2013 Carbon pencil on paper 93” x 72” Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery Adonna Khare Polar Bears , 2013 Carbon pencil on paper 93” x 72” Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery

Laura Lasworth Natural and Grafted Branches , 2001 Oil on wood panel 12” x 12”

Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery

Laura Lasworth Corporal Acts 1 , 2009 Oil on wood panel 12” x 12” Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery

Laura Lasworth Looking at the Over Looked: A Portrait of George Tooker , 2009 Oil on wood panel 12” x 12”

Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery

Patty Wickman 40 days, 2013

Nathan Huff This is how it is , 2011 Gouache and gesso on paper 98” x 48” Courtesy of the artist

Oil, pencil, and watercolor on canvas 41 paintings at 6”x8” or 8”x6” each

Courtesy of the artist and Lora Schlesinger Gallery

Nathan Huff Bluster # 2, # 3, # 9, # 13 , 2013 Gouache on paper 16” x 12” each Courtesy of the artist

Siri Kaur Destroyed Room, 2011 Pigment print 20” x 30” Courtesy of the artist Siri Kaur Hawk, 2011 Pigment print 20” x 16” Courtesy of the artist Siri Kaur Jamie, 2011 Pigment print 38” x 30” Courtesy of the artist Duncan Simcoe Book Boys , 2006 Alkyd on tar paper 40” x 32” Courtesy of the artist Duncan Simcoe Caught 2 , 2005 Alkyd on tar paper 40” x 63” Courtesy of the artist

Nathan Huff Wisdom Council on Work # 1 , 2014 Wood and hammer 8” x 24” x 24” Courtesy of the artist Nathan Huff Wisdom Council on Work # 2 , 2014 Wood and hammer 8” x 24” x 24” Courtesy of the artist

Siri Kaur Angela , 2011 Pigment print 38” x 30” Courtesy of the artist Siri Kaur Crow’s Field , 2011 Pigment print 40” x 40” Courtesy of the artist

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

University Curator Jeff Rau wishes to thank the faculty and staff of the Biola University Art Department and Biola’s Center for Christianity, Culture and the Arts (CCCA), for their substan- tial support in organizing this exhibition and for inspiring the Storytellers concept through their collective theme of “Spirit & Story” throughout the 2013-2014 academic year. Further thanks to all the participating artists and to Lora Schlesinger Gallery whose generosity made this exhibition possible. We are especially grateful to artists Laura Lasworth and Patty Wickman for contributing their time and insights to campus discussions at the CCCA Razor’s Edge Arts Conference, and to artist Adonna Khare for her participation in a series of gallery talks and studio visits on campus. We also sincerely appreciate the work of graphic designer Katelyn Seitz who has helped to translate this project into its present book form so that the stories can be shared long after the exhibition closes its doors.

The Earl & Virginia Green Art Gallery 13800 Biola Ave, La Mirada, CA 90639

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