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SUMMONING
THE SURREAL
Review
- Taranaki Daily
News, 12 April
2008
Art plugs us into an upside-down realm.
This “art
realm” helps us understand reality from a perspective that
brings
the shadows
of culture to life. In other words art has the ability to re-image life
in a
way that reveals thoughts that would otherwise be hidden and suppressed
due to
societal conventions. One particular art movement that became rather
successful
at this was Surrealism which started in the 1920s. Informed by the
psychoanalysis of Sigmund Freud the surrealists aimed to unlock the
doors of
the subconscious. To gain access into the hidden chambers of the brain
the
surrealists’ paid close attention to dreams and also made up
intuitive games
and exercises. One of Salvador Dali’s strategies was to
lie-down
with a spoon
in his hand with pencil and paper close by. The moment Dali started to
fall
asleep the spoon would slip out of his hand and hit a saucer. Startled
by the
spoons impact he would immediately grab the pencil and record the first
random
thing that popped into his head. By juxtaposing random assortments of
objects,
images and text the surrealists revealed entrenched primordial human
traits.
For instance, a famous sculpture by artist Man Ray comprised of a
household
iron which he welded on one inch spikes to its smooth surface. This
alteration
transformed a domestic tool used to smooth out clothing into a
torturous device
- an artistic act that draws to mind underlying tension or latent
sadistic
desires within the home. Therefore, the surrealists’ bizarre
creations made apparent
very common human emotions, desires or thoughts that moral society
would deem
sordid and debased.
Maree Horner a Taranaki based artist has devoted her
practice to investigating how the random assortment of imagery can
reveal such
latent understanding about human habitation and relationships. Horner
has
exhibited throughout New Zealand
and has been collected by the Govett-Brewster Art
Gallery.
Having studied at Elam
art
school in Auckland
during the 70s
Horner was
involved in the early development of conceptual and post-object art in New Zealand.
She became known for her sculptural works that demonstrated a
sensitivity
of
material and form. These works included precarious glass constructions,
rubber
tyre experiments, ice monoliths, sand forms and one work consisting of
an
electrified domestic arm chair. Since the mid 90s Horner has focused
almost
entirely on drawing, painting, printmaking and digital photography. The
inquiry
of Horner’s practice is somewhat similar to the
surrealists’ investigation of
juxtaposition and psychoanalysis. However, her work doesn’t
share
the wild
imagination or maddening delusion of early surrealism - rather
Horner’s imagery
is cunningly unobtrusive, persistently repetitive and more enigmatic.
Often working at a large scale and reduced palette of
pink, black and white Horner’s mixed media works present us
with
familiar but
uncanny imagery. The imagery depicts a lexicon of objects ranging from
humble
domestic items such as sofas, baths, dressing tables, jugs, paper bags
and cardboard
boxes juxtaposed with grand architectural forms like pyramidal columns
and in
her latter works a illustrative style donkey. Horner repetitiously
rearranges
this array of imagery in each work by pairing up different objects.
Each new
composition creates an absurd surreal situation. Rather than diminish
the
symbolic power of each item the repetition makes us consider the
possible
meanings of the pictured objects even more – to the point
where
we
are less
concerned with what each object is and more interested in the
relationship
suggested between their contrasting forms. Successively we become aware
of a
female and male narrative as grand pyramidal columns are reduced in
scale and
pictured inside paper bags or a donkey trodding on a bed –
odd
sexual innuendos
that draw attention to the social conditioning of gender relationships
and
suppressed sexuality.
In a new body of work entitled Furniture of the World,
Horner has further developed her visual language but this time using
digital
photography. These works depict domestic furniture and objects
containing
pounds of flesh. On closer inspection you notice that each fleshy lump
has a
belly button. Considering the belly button being the umbilical cords
port and
source of foetal nourishment – together with the receptacle
nature of these
domestic containers – suggest complicated but very
instinctual
meanings. The
domestic containers could indicate the influence our lived environment
and
family structure in which we develop as a secondary womb – a
place where we learn
about how to behave and belong. However, there is a touch of horror to
these
works bringing to mind news stories of troubling psychopathic killers
– usually
in the US
- that mutilate the innocent and hiding the dissected corpses in
fridges or
boxes - playing out their sick fanaticises. Therefore, these works sit
on a
tenuous line being both comfortably homely or horrifically debauched -
a
betwixt and elusive conclusion that reveals more about the animal
within us and
how little we understand our suppressed psyche.
Bruce
E Phillips
reviewrepository.blogspot.com/
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