1. Forever by Miriam Hitchcock
2. Translocation by Karla Hoepfner
3. Grass field by Patrick Jacobs
[artist statement]
Patrick Jacobs
The everyday world of the domestic landscape
provides the subject matter of
The Ortho Rooms. Taking
its name from the popular Ortho Books
for home and garden care,
this series of works blurrs perceptual distinctions
between painting, photography and constructed reality.
Set behind lenses,
these foreshortened spaces occupy the hidden
architecture of the wall, offering
the viewer an encompassing and magical view
of the mundane - a backyard
overgrown with dandelions, a kitchen linoleum
floor pierced by the leg of a stool,
a downspout clogged with dead
leaves.
Magic
has long served to capture
human imagination by seeming
to make possible the impossible,
and by turning one reality into another.
Similarly, a kind of pseudo-science or
homespun natural phenomena
whose subjects are typically at odds
with an increasingly anxious and paranoid world.
In their manic attempt
at achieving the impossible,
it is only in their futile attempt
at transcending their reality that they succeed.
In the end, the gesture
serves to tell a story
about the impossible journey,
rather than the destination
itself.