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100 STORIES:
photographs by Crystal Liu
and drawings by Crystal Liu, Ruth Marten,
Rachell Sumpter & Yuka Yamaguchi |
In Crystal
Liu’s photographs, meditations on her domestic
surroundings become metaphors for her emotional life.
Ordinary objects are arranged and framed to create
extraordinary places. Peeling wallpaper implies secret
histories. Cracks in a porcelain vase, a painted Japanese cup
or a close-up of a shirt worn by her lover are the landscapes
of dreams or symbols of private joys and sorrows.
Liu’s drawings utilize her peculiar visual vocabulary to further
describe her secret tales. In a series of five works called “The
Sea,” wolves, crows and leafless trees sip from and
are thus transformed by a (literally) glittering, black sea.
Ruth Marten draws with ink
on found antique etchings. The
etchings, often of scientific subjects, are of dubious accuracy.
Marten’s interventions further propel the imagery toward the
fantastic, though where one leaves off and the other begins
is not easy to discern. Like a child’s game of “telephone,”
or
the Surrealists’ “exquisite corpse,” the process
yields
delightful perversity. Rachell
Sumpter’s gouache and pastel narratives traverse
documentation and the sublime. Dwarfed by the Northern
expanses they populate, her characters intently engage in
purposeful activity. Or could it be ritual? When does habit
overtake reason? In glowing jewel-tones Sumpter presents
fables that may or may not have happy endings. Yuka
Yamaguchi’s delicate colored-pencil drawings are often
surreal self-portraits of her emotional existence -- like if
Frieda Kahlo made manga. In this exhibition, a series of
seven works relate her body to her world. As the mother of
an eight-month-old baby, Yamaguchi has created work which,
like the baby, relies heavily on her breasts.
Juxtapoz.com
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| Crystal
Liu, The Storm, 2008 |
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| Crystal Liu, The Sea, it
has touched the horizon, 2008 |
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| Rachell Sumpter, The Gleaners,
2008 |
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| Yuka Yamaguchi, 3 am, 2008 |
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| Ruth Marten, Mer -18th century
altered intaglio, 2008 |
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