- Total Risk, Freedom, Discipline
- In the early 20th
century abstraction marked a dramatic break from traditional or representational painting.
Rejecting our known material world, abstraction presented a radically new aesthetic
frontier. Unbound by form, it immerses us in purely emotional and spiritual sensations.
Viewing abstract art is akin to observing nature, like starring out into the ocean.
Whether an experience that is bewildering, enthralling, relaxing, or meditative,
contemplation is demanded of the viewer.
This exhibition features recent works by two emerging Bay Area painters: Byron Spicer's
densely layered stack paintings and Jeff Mondy's emotive and spiritual colorations. While
in some respects these works employ established abstraction principles, such as an appeal
to emotions and senses instead of cognitive forms, they are also a product of our times.
The places these artists grew up in and the artistic processes they devise reflect our
present society.
Spicer's stack paintings are strongly influenced by the liberal and culturally diverse
Mission District of San Francisco, where he grew up in the 60's and 70's. As an ode to our
present day media rich, channel surfing, web browsing culture, his works have an
overwhelming visual effect at first. Gradually we are able to process the information and
discern relationships between the various images.
Mondy's paintings are of a highly intuitive and spiritual nature, as an extension of
having growing up in a religious household in the Midwest. His works seek to sooth the
mind and re-energize the soul, serving as a shrine where one can privately contemplate the
spirit.
- Exhibition
sponsored by and exhibited at SunLibrary, Sun Microsystems, Inc.
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