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| LACE: Twenty Gallons | Seattle City Light |
Photos: Joshua White
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Twenty Gallons
Twenty Gallons is a large scale, site specific installation commissioned by LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions) where Livingston covered the monumental 15-foot tall archway in LACE’s front gallery with a series of panels constructed entirely from, as her title suggests, twenty gallons of acrylic paint. The installation exists (deliberately so) within multiple overlapping and potentially conflicting contexts. While references to both the earnestness of Jackson Pollack’s manic gesturing and Roy Lichstenstein’s playful yet cooly calculated Three Brushstrokes are in abundance, arguable the most intriguing element of the installation its location, both literally and metaphorically; Twenty Gallons exists as a threshold between physical spaces and artistic disciplines. Livingston still utilizes acrylic paint as a primary sculptural material in the same manner that has come to define her more recent work, yet the playfulness of the candy-like surface and color palette are upset by the impossibility of experiencing the work as a cohesive and unified whole. Her previous “paint-objects” tended to be singular objects which could be understood much like a painting or plinth mounted sculpture. Twenty Gallons is an installation that asks the audience to consider it as both of those things yet neither simultaneously. The scale and narrow dimensions of the work make it difficult to inhabit as a traditional installation; when one views the work from a distance, the work becomes distorted and difficult to comprehend, yet upon entering the work it flattens itself out and becomes an overwhelming panorama of mimicry and signification. Paint has been poured and treated like sculptural material which in turn has been formed to resemble “expressive” brush strokes, then layered to suggest particle board or some other architectural or sculptural material. Livingston’s work is necessarily ambiguous at the moment as it is suggestive of the artist moving away from a material critique of late modernism towards a more complex and open ended investigation of the slippages that are produced within the shifting relationships between material, location, and scale. — Robert Crouch BIO SUPPORT |
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