Mason
Eubanks & Indira
Martina Morre:
PERSISTENT BEHAVIOR - Repetition
as Art
October 7 to November 6, 2010
Opening Reception, Thursday October 7, 2010, 6:00 PM to 8:00
PM Closing Reception and Artist Talk, Saturday November 6,
2:00 PM
San
Francisco, CA, September 7, 2010. Cain Schulte Contemporary
Art San Francisco is pleased to present a two-person exhibition:
"Persistent Behavior-Repetition as Art: Mason Eubanks
and Indira Martina Morre".
The exhibition opens on October 7 and runs through November
6, 2010. There will be an opening reception on Thursday October
7, 2010, 6:00 PM to 8:00 PM
Repetition
is everywhere, from our habits, routines and relationships,
to music and art. It is our comfort zone and our driving force.
Our daily routines are often followed in an unconscious and
rhythmic manner. When systems of repetition and familiarity
suddenly disappear we find ourselves longing for them (such
as reaching out for a light switch in a hotel room and finding
nothing). The artists in this exhibition focus on the poetics
of repetition as their work transforms the banal into the
beautiful.
Mason Eubanks's paintings and drawings are
characterized by entire surfaces covered with small accretions
and marks built up over time to evolve into sensuous, dramatic
wholes. Slow and laborious, Eubanks's process embraces the
generative potential of repetition, while also addressing
how repetition can be non-static and involve an element of
play. Concentrated physical interaction, mesmerized mark making,
and a child-like fascination with accretion all lead him to
create fields of patterns where ideas of connectivity are
toyed with, and where the infinite nature of microscopic,
biological and galactic worlds are insinuated.
Indira
Martina Morre currently lives and works in the Bay
area. The majority of her new paintings are predominantly
white - drawings in the form of painting. She uses pencils,
graphite, color pencils, pastels and seldom oil paint. This
process allows her to alternate multiple layers of drawing
with thin applications of gesso, resulting in an appearance
of complicated depth while retaining a smooth paper-like surface.
The absence of the traditional visual pleasure of paint accumulation
is a strategy of inventing new ways of discovering painterly
satisfaction.
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