Reading

Magnolia Laurie: What Could Hold Us Together Sept 5

Previous Story

Photos from the Baker Artist Award Exhibit at the BMA

Next Story

Emily C-D: Intervenida at Loyola University Septe [...]

what could hold us together, a solo exhibit by Magnolia Laurie
Frosch & Portmann
Season opening on Wednesday, Sept 5 from 6 – 8pm
Lower East Side opening night
53 Stanton Street :: New York, NY 10002 :: 646.820.9068 
In her show, Magnolia Laurie poses the question of what could hold us back from the brink of falling apart, as mounting political, social, and economic calamities perpetually threaten. The paintings and sculpture may be seen not only as a question to a hopeless answer, but also as a resilient statement of hope and assurance of what will persist, endure, and maintain. The title of the exhibition comes from a line in Virginia Woolf’s To the Lighthouse. The artist has been recently rereading the novel along with Herman Melville’s Moby-Dick and John Steinbeck’s America and Americans. These narratives of precarious transition with wandering narrators inform the visual language and psychology of the environments in the artist’s work. 
To create the paintings in this exhibition, Laurie first composed collages as a starting point for the structures that inhabit her illusionistic, yet abstract landscapes. Her formations and barriers appear to be manmade, however the figures who created them are nowhere to be seen. The viewer is the only witness to the sense of an aftermath in the paintings. Structures and barriers are perched upon seemingly uninhabitable landscapes that have endured a devastation of some sort. Despite the imagined disasters present, there is also a strong sense of hope in Laurie’s work. Throughout the paintings, brightly patterned nautical signal flags appear. This universal emergency system is a call for help amidst the chaos. The curiously built framework and flags bravely endure despite the precarious environments they inhabit. The paintings work to balance domesticity with survival, the falsity of facade and the reality of barriers, and the hopeful with the hopeless. 
The installation in the exhibition, leisure came to us before we knew what to do with it, is composed of found and gathered materials, many of which are from the artist’s home. Two structures, similar to the ones in Laurie’s paintings, unite as one. They are rigged together, connected across the gallery with bright orange mason line, making them dependent on one another with the notion of counterweight. This sculpture, which includes objects of leisure such as a vintage croquet set and a stereo casing from the 1970s, is indicative of the multidudinous forms of entertainment we create to construct seemingly comfortable lives. The chaotic nature of the installation suggests that when we have an excess of leisure activities we can make chaos out of them and they can become absurd and counterproductive. The sculpture may also be seen as two people connecting despite all the chaos surrounding them. The amalgamation of disparate parts creates a unified and beautiful whole. In her latest work, Magnolia Laurie deftly uses structure to imply vulnerabilty, and the persistence of futile gestures to embody hope.  
September 5 – October 21, 2012 
Hours: Wednesday to Sunday, noon – 6pm 
we can all adjust to inhabiting the accident, 2012, oil on panel, 18 x 18 
in notions of comfort, knocked askew, 2012, oil and graphite on panel, 9 x 12 
in leaning, just a measure of acceleration, mass and time, 2012, 
oil and graphite on panel, 16 x 20 in
Related Stories
Baltimore art news updates from independent & regional media

This week: Evan Woodward's museum, Blaze Star, John Waters turns 78, Juius Wilson at AVAM, Megan Lewis, Joyce J. Scott, MICA UP/Start Venture Winner Announced, and RuPaul winners to race at Baltimore Pride, and more!

Fourteen Works of Art of MANY Excellent Choices from the CA Annual Auction

A Subjective and Personal List of Auction Artworks in Preview that I would Love to Acquire!!!

Women’s Autonomy and Safe Spaces: Erin Fostel, Lynn McCann-Yeh, and Cara Ober

In Conjunction with BmoreArt’s C+C Exhibit featuring Fostel’s charcoal drawings of women’s bedrooms, a conversation with the Co-Director of the Baltimore Abortion Fund

The best weekly art openings, events, and calls for entry happening in Baltimore and surrounding areas.

This Week: MICA Community Art & Service Program exhibition, In the Stacks performance at Peabody Library, City of Artists I closing reception at Connect + Collect, Mari Black at Manor Mill, Open Works yard sale, screening of Black Printmakers of Washington DC at Smithsonian Anacostia, and more!