ALDWYTH Work V / Work N
from:Ackland Art Museum
category:Arts and Entertainment
posted:July 1st, 2009
The Exhibition
For decades, the collage artist Aldwyth has produced her art in
relative seclusion from the larger art world. Now seventy-three, her
first major retrospective will premiere at the Ackland May 31, 2009.
"The Ackland is privileged to be the first museum to present an Aldwyth
exhibition of this scale," says Ackland Director Emily Kass. "Her
remarkable work demands to be seen. It is hard to think of an audience
who will not be mesmerized by these extraordinary pieces of art."
Organized by The Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art at the College of
Charleston, Aldwyth: work v. / work n. - Collage and Assemblage 1991-
2009 (May 31 - September 13, 2009) features fifty-one pieces, including
ten large collages, seven small collages, and thirty-four assemblages.
Video footage documents the artist's interaction with many works and
Aldwyth herself will be in attendance for the May 31 opening reception
and the Hanes Visiting Artist Lecture on September 8. After its Ackland
premiere, the exhibition will travel to the Halsey Institute of
Contemporary Art at the College of Charleston (October 23, 2009 -
January 9, 2010) and the Telfair Museum of Art in Savannah, Georgia
(February 10 - May 17, 2010).
The Art
Aldwyth lives and works in an octagonal house on the edge of a salt
marsh on one of South Carolina's sea islands, where she creates
astonishingly intricate collages and assemblages that recall the
fantastical intricacies of Hieronymus Bosch. Exhibition Curator Mark
Sloan, Director of the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art, describes
Aldwyth's complex, often epic-scaled collages as resembling "medieval
manuscript pages writ large." Each piece can take years to make. Scores
of minute images painstakingly hand-pasted to Japanese paper combine in
ambitious works such as Casablanca (classic version), measuring close
to six feet square and made up of hundreds of eyeballs lifted from
classic works of art, accompanied by a detailed index cataloguing the
origin of each eyeball. To create The World According to Zell, another
large collage, Aldwyth cut every image from an 1871 Zell's Encyclopedia
and reworked them into a reflection of her own unique perspective on
nature, life, and technology. A collection of twenty-six cigar boxes,
decorated inside and out, illustrate the entire alphabet, while another
assemblage - Evolution of a Species - records in the minutest detail
the history of the creation of a series of visual "experiments" that
resemble three-legged creatures.
The exhibition subtitle, work v. / work n., is to be read "work verb,
work noun" in reference to the appearance of the word's alternate
definitions in the pieces About Work and Corpus. This focus is
indicative of the artist's desire for her art to be appreciated both as
an object and a representation of the effort required to create such
things. "Work is what all art has in common," Aldwyth says.
The Artist
Though an outsider to the art world, Aldwyth is by no means an outsider
artist. Trained at the University of South Carolina and recipient of
more than a dozen artistic residencies and fellowships, her work has
been shown at the South Carolina State Museum (Columbia, SC), the Allen
Stone Gallery (New York, NY), the Huntsville Museum (Huntsville, AL),
and The Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art (Charleston, SC), among
many others. She uses the history of art, ideas, and technology as both
catalyst and source material. Despite her geographic isolation, Aldwyth
devours information and images available to her from libraries,
bookstores, the internet, and art magazines. "She is a voracious reader
and inveterate collector of detritus," says Sloan. "All of the objects
and images that enter her purview become fair game as the raw material
from which her works are made."
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue including essays by Sloan
and author and artist Rosamond Purcell. In her essay, Purcell observes,
"In Aldwyth's collages much is hidden in plain sight simply because
there is so much to see. If she has included autobiographical details,
they appear in disguise, as generically published pictures. Mixed in
and spread thickly with well-known art works, they embellish the
Japanese paper that is her current canvas." Further, Purcell says of
the artist, "For every flat assertion about Aldwyth's work, there will
be an alternate. She slips away."
This exhibition is made possible at the Ackland Art Museum with support from the Poitevent Redwine Trust.
Date: May 31 - September 13, 2009
Location: Ackland Art Museum
101 South Columbia Street.
Free admission.