PARIS.- Priska Pasquer Paris starts the new year with an exhibition that brings the artists Jane Benson and Genaro Strobel into dialogue. Benson is known for her interventions into found objects, literature, and works of art, reconfiguring them into questioning reassemblies. Strobel, too, enables a new reading of the real in his wood engravings on paper using photography, painting, and collage. While his complex narratives refer to individual experiences, Benson evokes a critical engagement with the current zeitgeist.
Genaro Strobel's works are monumental and rich in detail. Multiple and varied layers of narratives can be determined often remaining encrypted as the eye wanders along the distinctive lines of the wood texture characteristic of the artist's work. Strobel deliberately uses the wood grain as a form defining element, integrating it as a painterly gesture.
From the traditional medium of woodcutting, Strobel uses laser technology to develop his own image-making technique that brings together artificially conceived and natural forms by imprinting them into the grain. Strobel's process begins with photography, which he understands as recording the form of his surroundings. He further processes the images, shot with medium-format camera, either as individual photos or collaged image compositions, with artificial, digital brushstrokes, or as scanned-in pencil drawings. The printing block is then produced as the laser burns the overall motif, pixel by pixel, into the veneer wood panels. The blocks are further processed with brush and roller. Strobel deliberately counters the precision of photography and impression with gestural traces painted on the printing plate with a brush. Some areas of the imprint allow large fields of color to dominate the image motif and envelop the sharp photographs in a mist of color. Within this process, the artist paints in mirror images and applies the paint in a sequence of fixed layers, as at the moment of impression the paint mixes and glazes from back to front. In the final step Strobel applies pressure to the painted blocks transferring the oil paint onto the paper in mirror image, no further process is applied and the paintings are deliberately left alone to preserve the thin, homogeneous layer of paint.
This deliberate play with material also comes to bear in the multifaceted work of Jane Benson. The artists multidisciplinary approach spans the mediums of sculpture, sound, digital media, and prints. The works in Everyday to Come see Benson cutting and fracturing fake plants and books only to reassemble them through her investigative practice. Methods of destruction are used specifically as strategies of regeneration opportunities to reassemble, redesign, and reinvent existing entities.
In her Faux Faux series, the artist explores a prevalent illusionist trend: artificial plants are, unfortunately, in vogue. Today, copies decorate living spaces appearing deceptively, persistently real. Nature is not represented, but imitated, whereby reality and fiction merge in such a way that they become indistinguishable.
Benson cancels this unification of reality and simulation that the artificial flora suggests by cutting the leaves into geometric, unnatural shapes, such as, triangles and squares. Indeed, cutting reduces the artificial plant to fragments of itself, severing it from the familiar to embrace a new interpretation or future reality for the fake. The process of transformation is made visible and gives the mass-produced flora its own individuality; no element is congruent anymore, creating a more authentic rendering of illusory nature by the artist. Bensons hanging Flat Planter works are an extension of this work into an architectural scale, and a wry comment on the garden wall that has come to represent eco-architecture.
A series of black and white prints complement Bensons sculpture. The photographs document the silhouettes of the unabashedly fake flora. The images are reminiscent of photograms, which were created out of a desire for an economical, true-to-life image. Unlike photography, however, a photogram does not involve a camera, light-sensitive paper is exposed directly causing the uncovered areas of the paper to darken, thus, each image is unique. In mimicking the photogram, Bensons photographs once again reinforce the game of masquerade and show that the perceptibility of the real is accompanied by a multitude of simulated gestures.
In dialogue with Bensons Faux Faux works are a series of text and sound works. The End of the Patriarchal System and A Moral Renaissance are investigations into the contemporary resonances of essays by British suffragette Mona Caird. Benson dismantles and reconstructs the literary works by excising syllables of the musical scale do, re, mi, fa, soh, la, ti to reveal a found score. In a further step, Benson translates the excavated scores into geometric color field prints based on Isaac Newtons similarly arbitrary Color Spectrum. Layers of dots in various hues create a delicate moiré effect that visually embodies the revolutionary texts. The scores and abstractions invite the viewer to join in the act of translation at a time when it is essential to re-write and re-imagine womens rights.
Side-stepping the cynical, Benson emphasizes the absurdity of the false green, and classical forms of categorization, prodding us to look anew at culturally accepted objects and ideas. Benson makes the artificial plant what it is: a new creation of reality. Genaro Strobel also evokes a narrative space for possible critical perspectives by expanding the biographical perspective: "Think so far beyond the planet, the solar system, the galaxy, the universe, until life itself becomes strange." (Genaro Strobel, 2009). Today, within the current socio-political context, where the fake (news) challenges the real and falsehoods challenge truths, the need to question everything is paramount. Everyday to Come brings together work that refuses the spectacle.
--Dr. Wiebke Hahn