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TRANSFORMER presents:
DAYTRIPPERS
Contemplating time, movement, human relationships, and the interplay of environment and emotion, the four artists featured in Transformer's Daytrippers exhibition - Ryan Hill (New York, NY), Heide Trepanier (Richmond, VA), Bryan Whitson (Washington, DC), and Kate Woodliff (Richmond,VA) - present visual explorations that reflect physical, mental and spiritual journeys, both imagined and real.
Painting subtle yet compelling scenarios,
Ryan Hill's B(l)oom Series in gouche,
paper and pencil rubbings is a group of
small, dissimilar drawings that draw upon
botanical illustration, organic design, erotica,
old cartoons and modernist ideas as a
way of creating tension between the
process of flow and geometric certainty.
The works are unified by a theme of
blooming in a time of restraint. The artist
sees these works as quietly performing
themselves.
Attempting to come to conclusions about
herself and her surroundings through
imagined scenarios and false environments,
Heide Trepanier's beautifully lush
abstract paintings look into worlds of controlled
drips, odd prosthetic objects and
comic-like swirls, where the autonomous
markings of the past adopt anthropomorphic
characteristics. These elements playact
war and anxiety, ecstasy and joy.
Through these paintings Trepanier creates
non-linear narratives through the actions
of abstracted forms, where drips eat each
other and exist in a poetry of plasticland.
Using photography as a way of illustrating
and externalizing ideas, emotions, and
moments, Bryan Whitson's black and white
imagery catalogues and indexes both what
he thinks about, and when he thinks.
Similar to keeping a diary, Whitson's photographs
provides both others and himself
a document of an existence and the passage
of time.
Through the use of paper, print and plaster,
Kate Woodliff's installation work
explores modern-day families as subcultures
within themselves. Investigating
cycles of life, the construction and
destruction of relationships, and physical
being, Woodliff finds inspiration in simple
but often vital life functions that are frequently
taken for granted. Incorporating
solely black and white materials,
Woodliff's sculptural creations work to
convey the perception of family dynamics,
each with its own story and pace.
Exhibition Dates: March 20 ‚ April 24, 2004
Opening Reception: Saturday, March 20, 7-9pm
Location: 1404 P Street, NW Washington, DC 20005
Gallery hours: Thursday & Friday 3:00 pm - 8:00 pm, Saturday 1-6pm and by appointment.
Contact: 202-483-1102
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