VIRGINIA KATZ
The Artist as Nature
In a
famous statement by Jackson Pollock, when asked by Hans Hoffman whether he
worked from nature (i.e., from drawings or models), he said “I am nature” and
then refused to elaborate. When we consider the work of Virginia Katz in its
various guises, this statement may also occur to us. It offers a key to the
weight of her accomplishments, which have over time expanded into varying
dimensions of an artist not only working from nature, but becoming it. The
concept behind Land or Environmental Art creates a decisive break with the
narrative conditions within art of the past that depended upon the natural
world, such as the Impressionists, or that speculatively utilized spaces for
esthetic fodder while imposing conditional restrains, as in Conceptual Art. Katz
investigates nature’s vastness and multiplicity as an expressive sublime, and
her work alternates among the four elements, and between degrees of perception
and projection of scale and depth of meaning.
LAND
is one of her themes in which she has been making much of her newer work, is
characterized by the use of a single word from spoken vernacular, used in songs
or proclamations of discovery or traditional song. Katz’s process is likewise one
of exploration and excavation, in which discovery matches, act for act, the use
of the metaphor along with the appearance of land torn asunder. It’s nearly
impossible to comprehend the true nature of something without deconstructing
and analyzing it piece by piece. The reclamation of a landscape starts from the
bottom upwards—from its most mysterious nether regions to its more aesthetic
surface; for the earth is no mere sculpture. To comprehend the earth we must
have some knowledge of why it exists. Katz’s exploration proceeded in stages,
and we get to see each of them on her website, which in narrative precision
presents earlier models if we venture deeply enough. It’s my intention to do
so, if only to provide you with the proper understanding of what her current work
is and does. Katz’s recent works in the LAND series have emerged from a
continuity of explorations of spatial, dimensional, intimate, and iconic
depictions of the larger earth around us, viewed as if upon a globe or via a
telescope orbiting around it. These works are diffuse and expressive, and are received
to the unadulterated visual cortex as large abstractions until we realize that,
in accrual of multiples images side by side, that what we are seeing is not a
series of expressions but impressions gleaned from both an imaginary and a
scientific viewpoint. With the aid of meteorological reports, weather
photographs, and films that provide a basis for understanding the scale of
completely ambiguous phenomena vigorously rendered.
Entanglement (2017)Acrylic paint formed, peeled, cut and sanded on panel with Aquamarine, Citrine, Uncut and Cut Diamonds, Black Tourmaline, Rutilated Quartz and Malachite, 20 x 16 x 4 inches |
Two
types of work rank under this theme, one two and the other three-dimensional
(though some may call them reliefs). They use various titles but connect by
their appearance and by the type of perspective and detail with which they are rendered.
Katz proceeds in fits and starts as she simultaneously develops the two dimensional
versions, which in their earliest guises were more painterly and evocative
rather than depictive of real-nature appearances and events. Katz never sticks
to one format but makes both, addressing the illusion on the one hand, and the
reconstruction on the other. The picture and the object both narrate different
ends of the same spectrum, the picture placing us above events, looking out
over the earth, from an omniscient perspective, seeing water current, winds and
clouds, and land masses all as one palette; while her objects mine the intimacy
of a direct reckoning with evidence of man’s transgressions with the beauty and
complexity of the living environment around him.
Although
Katz records and reflects upon both natural and man made disasters, there is an
inherent presumption on her part that the most prominent ones are connected in
some way to either a human act, some repercussion of the mishandling of the environment,
in which human concerns were made to obscure and diminish nature’s needs, or the
mere inability of mankind to live in the natural world in such a way that when
natural disasters do happen, they could reduce the effect to themselves. Culpability
is connected not only to acts of selfishness, destruction, and a wanton disregard
for other forms of life, but by mismanaging population density, industrial
by-product, and other dynamics that do not work hand in hand with a responsible
coexistence with nature. But clearly, through her use of technology to aid her
in finding source material, Katz is no Luddite. This merely underscores the
need for self reflection that her work brings.
Particulate – 405 Fwy (2013)Acrylic on Panel, 16 x 12 x 3 inches |
What
Katz achieves is completed and motivated by the use of strategies to create art
works relying not only upon data and mechanical observation, but in some cases
the element itself. The sculptural works in Virginia Katz’s Land series present
a study in forms that is simultaneously a paradox of intent. Why does the
artist, in effort to discover the nature of the Earth, present us with one that
has been torn open? Clearly she wants to gaze not merely upon or over the
landscape, but beneath the surface, to see its bones and flesh laid bare. She
wants to undress it. It takes the viewer a moment to reorient to the object of
their attention. There is a vague pre-sentiment that what we are seeing is
somehow the bowels of a person and this is perhaps what Katz intends. The earth
itself, as an object spinning in space and containing multiple organisms, a
specific ecology, and billions of sentient beings, is too much to take in. At
the material level, as one of five elements, it is too atomized and perhaps
also too metaphysical. Yet where we can see that it was purposefully
deconstructed it takes on an emotional narrative. The progress of Katz's vision
through alternating and successively advanced means is a testament to her
vision in applying herself to an impossibly broad theme, to create models that
speak to the issues at the core of her rigor, so that through examination of
the world around us more of who we are
is revealed in the process.
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