NEW YORK, NY.- Burning in Water - New York is presenting An Ocean of Light by Brooklyn-based painter Eric LoPresti. The exhibition encompasses several types of work, including large paintings on linen, mixed media works on paper and altered digital photographs.
Employing a range of approaches to his theme, Eric LoPresti constructs a multifaceted depiction of the American West that scrutinizes our physical environment within the contexts of both the expansive narrative of the atomic age and the artists own personal history. While the globallytransformative story of the development and testing of nuclear weapons suffuses these works, LoPrestis visual field shifts constantly and seamlessly from the micro- to the macroscopic. As with the infinitely elusive location of a particle in quantum mechanics, LoPresti presents a vision of the American West whose physical characteristics and historical associations defy any attempt to be perceived and comprehended from a fixed viewpoint.
LoPresti was raised in Richland, a seemingly anodyne suburban town in the desert steppe of eastern Washington state, but it wasnt until after he had relocated to New York City that he began to appreciate his home towns critical position in geopolitics. Richland is adjacent the Hanford site, where nuclear engineers created plutonium for the Manhattan Project. During the Cold War, Hanford plutonium-powered many of the over one thousand nuclear tests conducted at Nevada Test Site, and some of those underground tests are depicted in this exhibition.
His subsequent remove from his home afforded LoPresti a radically different perspective on both his personal origin story and the epochal narrative of Americas atomic age. Belying the impact of his dual training as a scientist and as an artist on his modes of perception, LoPrestis selections of visual subjects seems influenced by an almost Heisenbergian uncertainty. Rather than depicting the precise moment of a nuclear explosion - the visually ubiquitous mushroom cloud - LoPrestis images render the affected environment, both natural and constructed, at a point of temporal attenuation. While never completely severing connections to his overarching narrative, LoPrestis approach remains defiantly prismatic. In addition to temporal modulation, LoPresti constantly shifts his pictorial focus between the complex ecosystem of the desert, the landscape and its broader environmental and physical qualities.
Many of the resulting images include detailed, nearly microscopic, examinations of the plant and animal life that survives in the brutal environs of the desert. LoPrestis depictions of the desert function as a bracing rejection of the oft-held notion that the desert environment is fundamentally void of life. As part of the comprehensive, vigorous examination of the atomic desert environs that recurs throughout his work, LoPresti intermittently shifts his focus to the extremely macroscopic by drawing upon high-altitude atmospheric and aerial surveillance imagery drawn from government archives.
While the title Ocean of Light is drawn from Joan Hintons first-hand account of the Trinity atomic bomb test, it may also be considered as referring to the ambient atmospheric qualities of the Western desert landscape. One of the most beguiling aspects of LoPrestis art is that, while addressing the extremely fraught topic of atomic weaponry and the threat of nuclear annihilation, his work simultaneously remains resolutely defined by the optic phenomena of color and light a paradoxical mode that he considers to be firmly ensconced within the painterly tradition of the apocalyptic sublime. For LoPresti, the visual aspects of the atomic landscape are not necessarily bifurcated into natural and atomic but rather reside at different points along an enigmatic continuum. Fundamental to these visions is LoPrestis adherence to the aesthetic of the western deserts - vast, harsh and beautiful places of subtle color relationships. Within his vision of a world bathed in an ocean of light, colors remain LoPrestis first-order elements:
The secret subject of this work is color the specific color of the desert, as I see it. Im using color to speak to my individual and cultural identity as an American artist, raised in the west, painting in the east, and thinking about the contemporary landscape
Eric LoPresti (b. 1971, Denver) earned a BA in Cognitive Science from the University of Rochester and an MFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art. Past awards include the Faber Birren Foundation Award, the Walentas/Two Trees Studio Grant and the Miami Young Painters Award. Recent solo exhibitions include Blooms at Elizabeth Houston Gallery (New York); Blueprint Paintings at the University of Rochester; and No Blue Skies at Kunsthalle Galapagos (New York). His solo exhibition Test Site was exhibited at the Smithsonian Institutions National Atomic Test Museum (Las Vegas). Current group shows include Plural at the University of Nevada Las Vegas and Site at Youngstown State University. In the fall of 2018, LoPresti will open Superbloom, a large solo exhibition at New Mexico State University. LoPrestis artwork has been cited in numerous publications, including Artforum, The New York Times, and Art in America.