10 May – 14 June

LORDY RODRIGUEZ
201 Drawings

In this exhibition of 201 drawings, each 10 x 14 inches, Lordy
Rodriguez
chronicles the visual alphabet of topography-
based forms that has comprised his work of the last 15
years.

The vocabulary of cartography forms the basis of Rodriguez’s
work. As his drawings have evolved, the works have
become more abstract, but the relationship to maps is still
apparent. Text has vanished, but topographical notations
are recognizable through familiar coded lines and
gradations of color. Mountainous terrain, fissures, lakes,
rivers, and islands are identifiable. But in these new
geologic microcosms, the familiar topographical forms begin
to take on a supernatural life of their own. Colors are
fluorescent and counterintuitive; shapes reminiscent of
landscape morph into abstract patterns. References to
microbiology, animation, Op Art, and textile design abound.

The act of charting the Earth and our universe has been an
integral part of our evolution as a species. We attribute
great power to the map; it is our key to understanding our
place in the world. Without one, we are lost, literally and
psychologically. Rodriguez delights in deconstructing the
utility and function of maps, turning the coded language of
cartography into a diagram of displacement.

Lordy Rodriguez’s work was included in the 2006 California
Biennial (Orange County Museum of Art), and he receives
his MFA from Stanford in May 2008.
 

JULIE CHANG
Ox-Herding

In ten paintings on panel, Julie Chang interprets the early
Buddhist "Ox-Herding Pictures" describing the path to
enlightenment. While the first depictions can be traced to
the 12th Century Chinese Zen master Kuoan Shiyuan,
Chang's translation is rooted in her experience as a first
generation Chinese-American growing up in Orange County,
California.

Recycled imagery — from old family photos, textile design,
pop culture, even the logo on Chinese take-out bags —
forms the basis for much of Chang’s work. She creates
patterns by combining decorative Chinese flourishes with
early 20th-century European wallpaper design, which are
then imbedded with images of significance from her life —
images that, imprinted in memory, have contributed to the
formation of her identity. These include oil derricks and
palm trees from her Southern Californian upbringing, the
stern face of her father, silhouettes of herself from
childhood photos, Asian strippers, and engagement rings.

Intertwined within these patterns, the metaphors of the
ox-herding story appear. A child progresses through ten
stages, beginning with the search for the ox, which
represents the true, essential self, and culminating in
transcendence of the self in the recognition of the unity
and inherent perfection of all things. For Chang, taking on
the challenge of exemplifying these stages reflects a shift in
her artistic practice from a focus on the past towards an
integration of self-knowledge in the present. Paradoxically,
while the ox-herd eventually loses himself in the path to
enlightenment, Chang has in fact discovered more of
herself in deciphering the process.

Julie Chang received her MFA from Stanford in 2007 and is
currently an artist in residence at the Headlands Center for
the Arts in Sausalito, CA..

 

 

XXXXX

9 drawings, 2008
 
 
 

 

Catching Sight [detail], 2008