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EVOLVE DISSOLVE

Anne Polashenski
GONORTH
a space for contemporary art
469 Main St., Beacon, NY 12508
gonorthgallery@hotmail.com
www.gonorthgallery.com
Contact: Joe Millar, Director, 845.242.1951 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
“Evolve Dissolve”
December 8 – December 30, 2007
Reception: Saturday, December 8, 6 - 9 PM
GO NORTH is pleased to present “Evolve Dissolve,” a group show featuring
seven artists.
The pieces constituting “Evolve Dissolve” are revealing studies of
transition. Figures and buildings move in and out of being, new forms of life
mature and pass, and patterns replicate in myriad fashions. The methods of chronicling
these changes vary. Some of the artists’ work tends to focus more on process
and structural elements, while others mine narrative techniques and visual relationships
as a means of developing philosophical, historical, or political underpinnings.
And all the while, time passes.
In Jonathan Allen’s Fallujah Dollhouse, we’re confronted with the
ubiquitous image of our most current war—the bombed-out car chassis—over
which in twisted ascension a meshwork of houses and cultural debris stream (and
plunge) from a seemingly secure, stately edifice. Is the vegetation sprouting
from the side a sign of hope or the green specter of consumerism?
The work of Aaron Sing Fox examines the nature of fabrication. Representation
is a process, which Fox renders in painstaking detail. Be it the construction
of a building or the casual growth of trees, Fox leaves up the scaffolding, inviting
us to view the architecture of content. His art is a testament to the ongoing,
mutable, raw quality of life.
Upon viewing Julie Anne Mann’s Mortifera series, each fashioned
from the
bones of various animals, one immediately wonders, ‘Evolution or genetic
breeding? Unearthed fossils or a sign of things to come?’ Bewildering as
they are elegant, Mann’s specimens actuate the tension between artifice
and reality.
The figures in Sarah Moran’s work develops as we do, intimately,
over time, in layers, evoking personality, consciousness, and selfhood
as constructs of
the biological and/or artistic form.
Anne Polashenski’s work investigates psychological issues of
control, power,
and entrapment, as with Japanese Interior Obliteration—a piece as luxurious
as it is haunting—where an idiosyncratic dress pattern takes a viral turn,
generating a dreamlike virtual space beyond the sleeping figure it engulfs as
it threatens to move beyond the paper.
The utterly engaging “visual diaries” of Edina
S. apply
painted fragments of memory and narrative to concrete and resin figurative
sculptures as a means
of conveying emotional states.
At first glimpse, Stacy Seiler’s silhouette images of industrial
landscapes
appear to be the work of a seasoned B&W photographer. Yet closer inspection
reveals tiny black flecks peppering the white spaces. With lines and edges so
carefully exacted, these meditative pieces enliven the defunct structures while
approaching a kind of charcoal precisionism.
Gallery hours: Saturday and Sunday 12 - 6 PM, and by appointment.
GO NORTH: A Space for Contemprary Art is located in
Beacon, New York. GO NORTH is part of Hudson River’s
vibrant art scene, which includes such notable venues as the Dia:Beacon,
Storm King Art Center, and Van
Brunt Gallery.
| 
Outside 
Inside 
Aaron
Sing Fox

Sarah
Moran

Julie
Anne Mann

Edina
S. 
Stacy Seiler |