Installation view of Unravelling Encounters at Light Square Gallery. Sam Roberts Photography
Unravelling Encounters
Nicole Clift, Lucia Dohrmann, Sonja Porcaro & Meng Zhang
Curated by Suzanne Close
OPENING: THURSDAY 23 February at 6 pm
20 February - 10 March 2023
Light Square Gallery
Unravelling Encounters Exhibition Essay
By Suzanne Close
To unravel is to investigate that which is perplexing, entangled and mysterious. Each of the artists in Unravelling encounters has a nuanced material language that reveals the physical processes of undoing, remaking, gathering and unfolding. Their work alludes to a multiplicity of entangled meanings associated with the spiritual and psychological process of unravelling. This disentanglement can be an uncomfortable state of transition, as it requires us to deconstruct tightly bound beliefs, but it is significant for our personal growth and development. Through our collective unravelling, we have the potential to develop a deeper perception of ourselves and weave new narratives.
There is a considered restraint in the manner these artists deconstruct and disentangle. They pull apart to seek clarity, discover and create a new. The process of unravelling is made visible in Lucia Dohrmann’s unwound and rewoven canvases. Her works reveal time-intensive processes where she grids precise mathematical patterns onto the canvas, stains them with earthy and neutral tones, only to unpick and unravel the threads.
Dohrmann’s Reflections series, 2022 comprises twin works created from a single canvas painting that has been unravelled. The horizontal weft threads of one painting have been carefully undone to reveal the ‘warp painting’, while the remaining loose threads have been reassembled to create a ‘thread painting’. They reveal an ordered balance within their duality. In Reflections I - warp, 2022 the intertwining pattern comes undone at the midpoint. The tear-drop shapes of Venetian red shimmer in a sea of green oxide, and fade as they unravel. The same circular shapes stretch and extend in Reflections I - weft, 2022. There is a muted softness in the resulting works where the arabesque patterns dissolve and distort as they mirror one another. Dohrmann plays with the expanded field of painting, searching beyond the surface of the canvas to draw attention to the structure and the space it occupies. There is a measured restraint in her process as she reveals slow systems of growth, decay and renewal.
Lucia Dohrmann, Reflections II – Warp 2022, acrylic on canvas, unravelled, 110 x 110 cm & Reflections II – Weft 2022, acrylic on canvas, aluminum bar, unravelled, knotted,100 x 60 cm. Photography: Emma Dohrmann
‘the subconscious is ceaselessly murmuring and it is by listening to these murmurs that one hears the truth’
– Gaston Bachelard
Sonja Porcaro’s installation Murmur/Mormorio, 2022, evokes a fence, trellis, musical stave and abacus. The vertical posts and horizontal wire rods pay homage to the geometric abstractions of Agnes Martin, while the looped objects sprouting from the structure are an ode to the postminimalist interventions of Richard Tuttle. The formal play of horizontal wires is interrupted with tenderly arranged loops of felt, shoelaces, and cotton spools. All objects are imbued with biographical references as Porcaro explores the idea of‘unravelling’ as it pertains to memory, family history, and the skills learnt and passed down to successive generations. The trellis structure alludes to gardening, a much-loved past-time of Porcaro’s Italian family. It is a nod to growing fruit and vegetables, and the shared activity that has brought parents, grandparents and now her daughter together.
Sonja Porcaro, Murmur/mormorio 2022/3,pine, wire, cotton spools, shoelaces, felt, dimensions variable. Sam Roberts Photgraphy
In Nicole Clift’s Monkey grip, 2022 a chain of S-shaped links hangs from the ceiling. They linger like a kiss, a scolding hiss or an over-resounding Yesss! The links precariously hang by their own weight as they seemingly stretch as they near the ceiling and floor. The suspended letters in blue biro ink are based on Clift’s handwriting plucked from the pages of her journal. She describes this work as an ‘augmented form of this studio language scaled up’. The chain is reminiscent of the childhood ‘Barrel of monkeys’ game that creates a continuous loop of interdependence. One idea scrawled in a journal can be inconsequential but often leads to another. The delicate balance of open links is also a reminder of tentative connections between words and their meanings.
As broken infinity symbols, the links in Clift’s chain speak of contradicting forces that are needed to maintain a balance. In the novel of the same title, Helen Garner wrote of both love and drug addiction as a tension between destructive desire and the self-preserving instinct to let go. These opposing impulses reoccur throughout Clift’s work. In tandem with Monkey grip, are the wall-mounted notebook pages printed in charmeuse silk. In scanning the pages they become archival documents, preserving the hastily scrawled notes and fleeting ideas. Methods for detecting air (Daisy), 2022, records Clift’s experiments with looped ribbons, threaded and suspended on piano wires. The photographs were taken of the wall in her former studio, a site of possibility. In her series of intaglio prints, mark-making documents the pace of slowly ruled and quick spontaneous looped lines. All these works record and remake the fleeting into something more enduring and tangible.
Nicole Clift, image 1: loop study – silk, 2023, silk tapestry, 8 x 22 cm & Monkey Grip (I win) 2022, powdercoated copper, 340cm x 5cm x 0.1 cm. Sam Roberts Photography; image 2: tangle, 2022 digital print on charmeuse silk, 21 x 29cm; loop study –diptych 2023 etching on Hahnemuhle paper 43.6 x 104 cm; Monkey Grip (I win) 2022, powdercoated copper, 340cm x 5cm x 0.1 cm; loop study – silk, 2023, silk tapestry, 8 x 22 cm. Sam Roberts Photography
Meng Zhang often uses the material language of malleable forms to observe, record, and reflect the actions of daily life. In Container No 1 - 9, 2022 a series of cast concrete objects rest on wooden blocks and hand-dyed mats. Thesculptural forms show traces of the cardboard and Styrofoam packing they were cast within. They are like fossils of the Amazon delivery age, but instead of newly purchased goods, the hollows offer glimpses of fingertips, knuckles, and toes. The appearance of these appendages is jarring. They suggest acts of violence but also speak of the tenderness of a soft touch, toes curled in moments of pleasure or pain. A protruding stem is all that can be seen of a Valentine’s Day rose buried within. Through the casting process, Zhang preserves these intimate moments, but by embedding them in concrete, there is tension between what is hidden and what is revealed to us.
Meng Zhang, Container No 1 to 7 2022, (installation in Light Square Gallery) Concrete and plaster, leaves, seeds, 18.5x13x9cm, dimensions variable & Container No 4 and 5, 2022, concrete and plaster, seeds, rose flower, Size 22 x 8 x 10 cm. Sam Roberts Photography
Unravelling encounters proposes a series of dialogues between the artworks as a way of disentangling their potential insights. These relationships create tensions between the process of creation and destruction, which in turn reflects our own conflicting desires. To encounter these works is to meet with the unknown aspects of ourselves, and in doing so, we are forced to reconfigure our positions. Perhaps it is only when something becomes undone that it can be reconstructed in a meaningful way.
Notes:
Bachelard, Gaston, 2014. The poetics of space. Penguin Classics.
Deleuze, Gilles, and Guattari, Felix, 2013. A Thousand Plateaus. Bloomsbury Revelations. London, England: Bloomsbury Academic.
Garner, Helen, 1977. Monkey Grip, Penguin Group (Australia), reprinted: 2008.
Catalogue designed by Rosina Possingham
Small Window Co.