Tuesday, September 25, 2012

PERSONA: FILM STILLS

 In Ingmar Bergman's existential drama, Persona, two main characters occupy the black and white frame. One of them, an actress that has had a nervous breakdown, riddled with the terrible sense of guilt for her lack of love and affection towards her own child; the other, the nurse that is trying to help. In this film, Bergman draws on the concept of "good" and "evil", and the conflict of human emotions towards these subjects. The characters themselves depict the state of being torn—divided in two—and abiding in a state of introspective madness. 
 
In these stills, the figures occupy a world of black and white, moving to and fro, from being in the light, and then into the darkness. The compositions then are entirely constructed of light and dark, devoid of color, and rely on shade alone for recognition. As stills taken from a time based medium, allowing glimpses into minute details of a moving narrative, the images project beyond the seeming regularity of the acts, and reconstruct another narrative within. Here, the focus remains on the relationship between light and darkness, the interaction of light with the characters, and the trope of film itself as a constructed reality.  Within the narrative of these images is the state of being divided between light and darkness, drawing on what existentialist Søren Kierkegaard called “being of two minds”.  It is in this state, within the film, that the distinction between “light” and “dark”,  and “good” and evil”, becomes blurred, creating a haunting, dismal reality.  
 




 
Curtain
Digital film Still
Dark Figure 1
Digital film still
Dark Figure 2
Digital film still
 Dark Figure 3
Digital film still
 Gazer 
Digital film still
 Horror
Digital film still
 Light & Dark
Digital film still
On & Off
Digital film still
 Machine
Digital film still
Shadow
Digital film still
  Sleeper
Digital film still
U.F.O
Digital film still

Monday, September 24, 2012

COUNTERCONSTRUCTS: MODES OF PAINTING (INSTALLED)

 
                                                              Photo by Emily Rodia








Photos by Lily Kuonen 




Photos by Lauren Moore

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

OPEN STUDIO

In further news, my studio mate, Justin Rubich, and I will be hosting an open studio on Friday, September 7th, at 319 N 11th Street, on the 6th floor. For more information, click HERE.



Friday, August 17, 2012

CURATORIAL ESSAY

Here is the curatorial essay for COUNTERCONSTRUCTS. Sounds like a show I'd like to see. Take a look!

Thursday, August 16, 2012

NEW PHOTOS: NEW WORK

Photos by Matthew Coons


First Efficient Cause, 2012
Latex on canvas and wall
12x12"

Life Line, 2012
Latex on canvas
24x24"


(Life Line detail)

Rise, 2012
Latex on canvas and wall
12x12"

 The Second Day, 2012
Latex and florescent spray paint on canvas
73x72"

 (The Second Day detail)

If B then A, 2012
Spray paint and graphite on paper
22x15"

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

SHOW DATE: UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND


In September I will be in another three person show with colleagues of mine, Emily Rodia and Lily Kuonen, at the Herman Maril Gallery at the University of Maryland. Any one who thinks they could attend, should. It will be a great looking show, and I am truly excited to see all our work together. More information can be found HERE.

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

EXLPLORATION IN VIDEO

I have been dabbling in video a little lately and I have produced these two short films thus far. I have other ones I am working on, but I thought I would post these for now because they are more-or-less finished. They are each three minutes long and show a very still scene from nature, accompanied by somewhat of a dismal droning sound. In these pieces my aims are a few: Firstly it is to touch on the theme of the sublime and the proposition set forth by Kant, that the sublime was something that provokes both joy and some kind of terror, or, as I describe it as, angst. There is this overwhelming feeling when we see certain things, whether a painting, the ocean, the horizon, great colors of the sky, mountains; all these things that produce this feeling of joy and angst, as if our bodies and souls are filled with a gaping wonder and this need for instantaneous knowledge of the thing when we see it.  Yet it does not come. The grandiose awe of the phenomena makes our spirits squirm. That is something I try to touch on in these videos: there is a peaceful and pastoral scene, yet at the same time there is something that makes the viewing feel tense. Which leads to the next objective: Waiting. There are these passages of open sky within the frames, the image of the infinite, nothing and yet  everything all at once, and where the heavens meet the earth. The idea being that there is this longing for the things which lay beyond, and there is this tense waiting and watching, for something to happen, for everything to happen, which in itself holds a beauty, yet is still susceptible to an angst and doubt. The films end without anything seemingly happening, yet what you are watching is everything happening. The world existing in space and in infinity. So simple and yet so complex; and in conjunction, the lens of the camera serves as a metaphor, or parallel rather, of the human eye, and how something so small can perceive so much. 
 

(Headphones help the viewing experience)




Thursday, July 12, 2012

GOING



   Latex on linen and wall
12x12"

I am still working on this body of paintings, and I have been really excited about them. The ends for the means of this body of work is for a three person show I will be apart of at the University of Maryland in September, with Lilly Kuonen and Emily Rodia. I am very excited to be exhibiting with these ladies, and absolutely thrilled to see our work together. 

This new painting (not yet titled) is actually the one that started my thinking about this suit of paintings, but was not executed till over a year later. So I have been carrying these ideas with me for some time now. What I like most about this piece is how the form (the cross) is breaking the frame, yet it is "holding" it to the wall, so to speak; and further still it highlights where wall meets painting and visa versa, as the others do. I have much more to say about these paintings, as well to continue my thesis (I have been doing some writing), which I will be posting at a later time.

Tuesday, June 26, 2012

PROGRESS STILL




Latex on canvas and wall
12x12"


Still moving ahead in this body of work (and I apologize for the terrible images, but it is the best quality image I can get right now. I'll have better ones later on--I promise.) This piece is not yet titled, but eventually I will get down to naming these when I've moved along a bit more and have spent more time thinking on them.

Monday, June 11, 2012

PAINTING DEVELOPMENT : STUDIO SHOTS

 Latex on canvas
24x24"



I'm furthering my experiences in painting and the different ways I can express the specific themes I've been dealing with in my work (e.i. space, time, the infinite, and ultimately questions of origins of both our art/art making, and our universe.) But furthermore, the topic in dealing with these subjects has been the theme of relationship and space particularly.  Relation of the painting to the wall, and visa versa, and we as humans to the universe. One particular question that I keep in the back of my mind and contributes to my thinking of these pieces and in conjunction with relationship is, do I take part in God or does He take part in me? Do I invite Him into my life, or do I request to be apart of His much larger plan. 

These "space" paintings, as I've kind of coined them for myself, are after something in particular, and that is that they are both representative and literal at the same time; and that is something I enjoy working out in my work and find relevant to my faith. These pieces are addressing space both representationally and literally in the sense that there is somewhat of an illusion of deep space within the frame, and at the same time they draw attention to the actual space that we all inhabit in their abject-hood (the minimal qualities of the pieces that declare space.) I equate this relationship to that of Christ, the logos, who was both fully God and fully man: representative of God and God Himself at the same time.

The horizon line is something that I have been using for some time now, and it has a deal of importance to me. In this piece the line/cutout depicted is vertical. But couldn't it still be a horizon? The earth is not flat after all. But the one thing that might be of the most importance is how there is now, with the hanging cutout strip, a factor of positive and negative space,  one thing that, in a sense, creates the other by merely existing (like light and dark,) which brakes the frame in the traditional sense. The line through the middle is mirrored by the hanging piece, and reaches into the beyond. At the same time, and in the back of my mind, the imagery is somewhat reminiscent of a wound and the blood pouring from it, as well as a narrow opening. 

(Note: these are rough images, and I would ask that you disregard the paint on the wall beneath the panting. It is not apart of the piece. The piece is not yet titled.)

2 NEW COLLAGES

 Reunion, 2012
Mixed media
18x12"

 Reunion (detail)

Within Me, 2012
Mixed media
18x12"

Monday, April 2, 2012

3 NEW COLLAGES

 Come Thou Fount
Mixed media
18x12"

Transfiguration
Mixed media
18x12"

Third Morning
Mixed media
18x12"

Sunday, March 25, 2012

NEW WEBSITE

I have made a new website on tumblr that I will be using as my main portfolio. So here it is:
http://stephenwevans.tumblr.com/

I hope to be changing it to a .com soon...

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

YES

“I want to create an atmosphere that can be consciously plumbed with seeing...like the wordless thought that comes from looking in a fire.”
--James Turrell

Friday, March 2, 2012

3-IN-1 PAINTING: "THE SECOND DAY"

The Second Day, 2012
Latex and florescent spray-paint on canvas
73x72"
This newer painting, now titled "The Second Day," had me a little stumped for while, and though I had a rough idea as to what I was trying to accomplish, it was still largely a mystery. So, I took some time one day recently to sit down in front of it and write some notes down in my notebook, and came to a better understanding of what this piece means to me and what it's all about:

Perhaps it is raising the awareness of the vast interconnectedness of the space in which we inhabit and the eternal space of the universe. This is highlighted. It’s remembering the big picture and how fascinating it all really is. Because the piece is read as one thing, though it is comprised of three elements: the two painted panels and the third being the wall itself. It becomes not a division of material, but rather a uniting. Perhaps it is bringing to light that eternity is a reality, and closer at hand than we give notice. It is very easy to forget the massive place in which we live in, and our relation to it. I’d like to draw attention to that because of how humbling it can be.

Relation, I think, is one of the most important things because it is what connects us all as humans. As surgeon and author Sherwin Nuland brings to attention that the things that relates humans universally, no matter where you grew up, or what side of the world you’re on, is the basic biological make up that we all share that comprise our needs, wants, pains, and emotions, and ultimately an understanding. In his own words he says that it is these things that humans “share by virtue of the physical properties of their body and kind of brain they have, which bring out certain sorts of strivings, certain sorts of emotional needs that are indeed universal.” I think it’s the awareness of these things that make you feel smaller in a larger place, and draws attention to beauty of “the big picture.” Awareness and the spirit are becoming synonymous for me. The feeling of awe when encountering nature, a newborn, and the awareness of relation to a person, place, or thing brings about things in us that are very unrelated to nature and are abstract at that. This being said, it arouses the question as to how it all came to be. Why is there something rather than nothing? (This a question you will see pop up a lot on here I think.)

James Turrell's "Roden Crater"

In a way, it relates to James Turrell’s “Roden Crater” in the respect that you feel more in your place, when faced with such a vast space, viewing the stars in such a way that you feel yourself turning instead of the stars, which is the reality. In this sense you feel like you are stepping into a great space and perhaps realizing, or feeling, your smallness. In a sense, the “space” in the painting is scaleless and infinite, and relates to the Crater in this way. In the painting, it is seeing all the parts as a whole, and all of time at once. 


The Second Day (detail)

In C.S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity, He states something rather profound in dealing with time and how it relates, or does not relate, to God. In chapter 25, entitled TIME AND BEYOND TIME, Lewis illustrates a rather abstract, yet basic understanding of the relation between both God and man’s journey in time, stating:

If you picture Time as a straight line along which we have to travel, then you must picture God as the whole page on which the line is drawn. We come to the parts of the line one by one: we have to leave A behind before we get to B, and cannot reach C until we leave B behind. God, from above or outside or all round, contains the whole line, and sees it all.

This painting, now titled “The Second Day”, relating to the Genesis narrative and the second day of creation, speaks onto this subject where heaven and earth/ land and sky are separated. But it is also the first morning, and the birth of the horizon. This line can be seen as a separation of things, or perhaps more optimistically, as a place where things are joined together.