SAVANNAH, GA.- SCAD Museum of Art presents Bloom, a solo exhibition by Natasha Bowdoin, featuring a site-specific sculptural installation along with recent two-dimensional works. Bowdoin draws inspiration from two key elements: literature and nature. Growing up in Maine, a state nicknamed the Pine Tree State because of the expansive white pine forests covering nearly 90 percent of the states landscape, Bowdoin often spent her days roaming the forests or on a boat in the Atlantic. These early memories of her adolescent interactions with nature fostered her appreciation and wonderment for the magnitude of the worlds landscape. Bowdoins practice offers viewers a chance to experience, interpret and align their own senses in an effort to better understand their placement within the natural world, calling to mind a quote from Nature by American author and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson: The lover of nature is he whose inward and outward senses are still truly adjusted to each other ...
Bowdoin builds upon her own experiences and illustrates literary passages to create pictorial, multi-colored and tiered interpretations based on a ritualistic and methodical studio practice. This meditative practice employs an assortment of mixed media, such as painting, paper cut from found and drawn elements, and writing. The summation of these parts creates an awe-inspiring landscape of flora and fauna. These meticulously layered and complex handcrafted installations take anywhere between three weeks to two years from conception to installation.
Over the last two years, Bowdoin has worked intensely to create Garden Plot, which debuts at the SCAD Museum of Art in her first Southeastern solo museum exhibition. The natural world and botanic illustrations play equally important roles in the conceptualizing of the work, most notably Ernst Haeckels prints of sea life and lunar maps. Drawing from these sources, along with Emersons Nature essay and Henry David Thoreaus Walden, Bowdoins installation seeks to create a new rhythmic storyline. Using an assortment of mixed media cut paper, graphite, gouache and wall painting this installation transforms the aforementioned texts into visual patterned abstractions. These abstracted pieces show glimpses of language and text that analyze the ebb and flow of nature and our interaction within it.
This exhibition is curated by Aaron Levi Garvey, SCAD assistant curator of exhibitions.