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The Project Series
By transforming found and fabricated materials into extraordinary objects, Young creates environments that seem dreamlike in their associations with the body and the home. Happy Hide Better Blood, like the artist's earlier installations, grapples with issues of physicality, scale, and the way we see our bodies in relationship to architecture. Here, however, she adds a more playful and decorative aspect to potentially disturbing representations of the body--skin, organs, viscera. This installation consists of two rooms, one loosely representing the idea of "flesh," the other "blood." The larger flesh-colored room evokes the domestic, with its parlor-like atmosphere. Further exploring the idea of the home and the decorative, Young includes anthropomorphized furniture, a hair rug, and nail polish paintings. On the walls, she has recreated and enlarged a 1940s wallpaper pattern, using flesh-toned stencils that simulate upholstery. The skin-like quality of the walls is echoed in the hand-made clothes used during the performance--the artist's "new skin"-- hanging on the wall.
This exhibition of the work of Liz Young is the second in the inaugural year of Montgomery Gallery's Project Series. Focusing on Southern California artists, this ongoing program of small exhibitions will bring to the Pomona College campus art that is experimental and that introduces new forms, techniques, or concepts. For their invaluable help in preparing the installation, the artist and I would like to offer special thanks to Gallery Manager Gary Keith and to Professor Mercedes Teixido and the students in her "Installation: Art and Context" course. Rebecca McGrew, Curator |
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