Paul Morrison at The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu
The Contemporary Museum
2411 Makiki Heights Drive
Honolulu, Hawaii, 96822
www.tcmhi.org
O2art 3: Paul Morrison, gamodeme
May 26 Indefinite
The Contemporary Museums artist project series, 02art, continues in 2006 with British artist Paul Morrison.
Morrison often draws on imagery of the natural world from sources in popular culture, fine art, film and science to transform familiar images of nature into something uncanny and altogether unnatural. Hence nearly all aspects of his images their scale, color, flatness, and fabricated appearances are at odds with their counterparts in nature.
His evocative wall paintings suggest natural environments and pseudo-scientific investigations, but are more directly engaged in a dialogue with artistic concerns that are formal and thematic. These serve to educe an unanticipated sort of deep or subconscious emotional response to public architectural space, which is otherwise transitional and often goes by unnoticed. At The Contemporary Museum, Morrisons outdoor wall painting alongside the museums Barbara Twigg-Smith Honl Terrace and Reflecting Pool refers to the scientific term gamodeme. Derived from the Greek deme – a unit of subdivision in ancient Attica gamodeme refers to an isolated community of intrabreeding organisms (or deem) of the same kind or species.
Jutting from TCMs façade, the monumentally-scaled wall interrupts the architectural footprint of the museum while the stark black and white painting forces engagement with the museums floricultural setting. The painting features stylized flower forms through which is glimpsed the image of a two-story half-timbered house or fachwerkhaus referring to Albrecht Dürers c. 1498 engraving Madonna, Christ Child, and Monkey. Happening upon the curiously out-of-place image of the medieval house, museum visitors may call into question their relationship to the natural environment around them. By introducing a dissonant chord within the overwhelming beauty of the site, Morrison underscores TCMs beautiful but unnatural (man-made) garden setting. This jarring adjacency interrupts the gardens quietude and forces an experience that is empirical, internalized and romantic. Morrisons painting underscores the gardens artifice while revealing it to be a monumental work of art in and of itself.
About the Artist
Paul Morrison was born in Liverpool, England in 1966 and studied at Goldsmiths College, London. He has exhibited widely in US museums including The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, CO; UCLA Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; The Fogg Museum, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA; and The Drawing Center, New York, NY. Recent museum exhibitions include the Tate Britain, London; the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin; the Galleria d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Bergamo; Magasin, Grenoble; Southampton City Art Gallery; and Kunsthalle Nürnberg. A portfolio of 12 screen prints by Morrison titled Black Dahlias was published in 2004 by Paragon Press.
O2art 3: Paul Morrison, gamodeme has been organized by Michael Rooks, Curator, The Contemporary Museum and is generously sponsored by Schaefer Design Hawaii with additional in-kind services provided by ResortQuest Hawaii, formerly Aston Hotels and Resorts.
About THE CONTEMPORARY MUSEUM
The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, is the only museum in the state of Hawaii devoted exclusively to contemporary art. TCM provides an accessible forum for provocative, dynamic forms of visual art, offering interaction with art and artists in a unique Island environment. TCM presents its innovative exhibition and education programs at two venues: in residential Honolulu at the historic Spalding house, and downtown at First Hawaiian Center.
The Contemporary Museum
2411 Makiki Heights Drive, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96822
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