The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

Theresa Ganz at Brown; plus, Ed Osborn’s soundscapes

Another green world
By GREG COOK  |  October 2, 2012

tidal-pool-2_main
HANDSOME ABSTRACTION Ganz’s Tidal Pool II.
Theresa Ganz, who teaches photography at Brown University, grew up in New York City. So her sense of nature, she writes, comes more from books and 19th-century German Romantic landscape painting than from getting muddy in the woods.

In "Don't get out much," her exhibit at Brown University's Bell Gallery (64 College St, Providence, through October 7), she mulls this divide between direct experience of sticks and stones and the drama imbued in artistic representations of the great outdoors. Her past work includes cut out and collaged photos of tangled branches of trees and bushes; the early ones were composed as decorative patterns, but they've increasingly become all-over abstract patterns.

Here she collages together her photos (shot on film, converted to digital) of glacial rocks and the flora and fauna of tide pools with digital scans of loose watercolor washes. In Tidal Pool I (2012), we seem to be looking down through a ring of rocks into a milky ocean pool of snails and seaweed; Tidal Pool II (2012) similarly blends photos that together suggest an underwater canyon or green moon rocks. In Tidal Pool III (2012), we peer through a green and gray rocky canyon that frames a valley of pink underwater plants.

Ganz tints most everything green — like bronze that has oxidized due to exposure to the elements. This gives her photographic prints a vintagey patina, like the cover of an old sci-fi paperback or an image run through a nostalgic Instagram filter. The actual physical layering of the photographic prints plus the changing focus within these images give a feeling of rocky 3D spaces. You can get lost in the realist details — or read them as handsome, if rather polite, abstractions in the tradition of Aaron Siskind.

Cavern-diptych_main
WATERCOLOR WASHES Ganz’s Cavern Diptych.

In some, like Cavern Diptych or her Pass diptychs, the collaged on rock photos become frames around blue-green-purple watercolor washes. I think they're supposed to feel like pools or skies you could fall into, but her open watercolor fields jibe awkwardly with the highly detailed rock photos, flattening the space and making it feel inert.

Ganz's painting technique also hampers her ambitious 490-square-foot mural covering the floor-to-ceiling windows of the building's entrance lobby. She blows up blue-green-purple watercolor washes to vast proportions in an attempt "to put the viewer inside the space of the images." Her painting chops aren't compelling enough to be that transporting or command so much territory. But when weather conditions are right, the sun coming through the trees outside can project dramatic silhouettes of their trunks and branches onto the windows.

Another Brown teacher, Ed Osborn, a professor of sound art, computing, and electronic media, is showing his musical-mechanical contraptions in "Standing Wave" at the Wheeler School's Chazan Gallery (228 Angell St, Providence, through October 10). The installation consists of five metal poles, with speakers on top, slowly swaying in metal stands — picture robot sunflowers swaying in an acid breeze. Wires run from each one into an electronic box and eventually a Mac computer displaying a blue wave screensaver.

1  |  2  |   next >
  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Brown University, Bell Gallery, Ed Osborn
| More


[ 06/18 ]   The Psychedelic Furs + Hope Anchor  @ Fete
[ 06/18 ]   House, by Alan Ayckbourn [playing with the interconnected Garden]  @ Trinity Repertory Company
[ 06/18 ]   "The Festive City,"  @ RISD Museum
ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   CALMING AND EXCITING  |  June 18, 2013
    “This is the largest height outdoor mural that I’ve painted, and I’ve been painting murals for 25 years." Amy Bartlett Wright i s talking about the four-story-tall crashing waves she’s painting on the wall above Coastway Community Bank’s parking lot at 180 Washington St. in Providence.
  •   THE BUZZ OF CREATIVITY  |  June 11, 2013
    Joe Pastore is a “Juggalo,” according to his brief artist biography for the exhibit “Artless: Rhode Island Outsider Art with RHD-RI” 186 Carpenter St. Gallery in Providence. His bio supports this by including a photo of him in a hoodie professing his allegiance to the horror-hip-hop rap duo Insane Clown Posse.
  •   BUILDINGS PEOPLE LOVE TO HATE  |  June 04, 2013
     Viera Levitt looks at Brutalism
  •   A FEW FLIGHTS OF FANCY  |  May 29, 2013
    The ladies have it under control in Xander Marro's puppet dioramas exhibited in the group show "New Mythologies II" at Candita Clayton Gallery.
  •   A REALLY BIG SHOW!  |  May 21, 2013
    This showcase of tomorrow's-art-stars-today is both invigorating and overwhelming, with work by 194 students.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2013 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group