Tuesday 30 October 2012

Meta-lithics, Hinton Municipal Library

I have a show going up this week in the library in Hinton, comprising the four works of my Meta-lithics series so far. This exhibition gave me the impetus to have frames put on my prints, so I'm very excited to unveil them. Tomorrow I'll be picking up my prints from the place in Edmonton where I had them framed, excited to see how they turned out. Opening reception is on November 1st at 6:30pm, show runs for the rest of the month.

Wednesday 30 May 2012

New website / gallery of works

http://cargocollective.com/andrewgodsalve

New site to show my work, free from all the rampant verbosity of this blog. I certainly intend to keep this blog going, but any new completed works will be added to the portfolio there.

Saturday 19 May 2012

Artist Statement, 05/12


Geologic processes and digital processes exist on scales of time that do not allow for direct human observation, one being impossibly slow, the other impossibly fast. While both processes determine characteristics of the spaces we inhabit and the ways in which we inhabit them to a significant degree, for the most part our perspective only allows us to see their effects, not the process itself.
My artistic practice attempts to bring together these polarities visually. My photographic interests are drawn to geological formations, such as shoreline rock outcrops.  I shoot using a digital camera, and after importing the images onto my computer I use them as the raw materials in my technique of recombinant photography. Piece by piece, I import fragments from many different images into a new digital canvas, where they are arranged according to precise geometric guidelines. The resulting composite image retains recognizable characteristics of rock, yet any definite horizon or perspective are abandoned. The geometric arrangements suggest physical structure, yet without reference points of human scale a disorientating effect is created. This confusion of physical scale reflects the incomprehensibility of the time scales of geologic and digital processes, drawing into focus that which operates outside of human perspective.

Andrew Godsalve, May 2012

Wednesday 9 May 2012

Embryonic Meta-lithics V, and a plan for the Park


Started on this fifth Meta-lithics image recently, in an attempt to get back into the right head-space for revising my artist statement. The focus of my work has changed significantly since the fall, and even my statement as it was in the January post no longer fits with my current aims.
Prior to the spring I was incorporating images of human-made and natural elements into my composites, with only very loose parameters for what type of material or setting I would use (wood paneling, concrete wall, construction site, etc). Since then I have realized that the "human-made" need only manifest itself in the reality of the medium as a constructed image. This gives my work tighter focus, not only in visual terms but conceptually as well. The strange dynamic I have arrived upon - fusing the geologic and digital as two extremes of temporal inaccessibility - has now become my primary concern and my revised artist statement will convey this.

In terms of the new image, obviously it's in the very early stages yet but I'm pretty keen on how it's shaping up thus far. Bringing back the circular shape that I felt worked quite well in Meta-lithics III, and also hoping to take into consideration the expansiveness noted in IV.
As an additional note, this fifth image will still be comprised exclusively of geologic forms of the Victoria area, despite the fact that I've now returned to the redneck backwater of my hometown on the other side of the mountains. It is a strange feeling of dislocation to be working on an image from photos taken very far away, but I'm fairly certain I have plenty of resources at my disposal without needing to re-shoot to complete the composition.
For a new project I plan to document the geologic forms of the nearby Rocky Mountains, in the Jasper National Park area. This Jasper project will still utilize the hyperphotographic technique of the Meta-lithics series, but I am curious to see if my method may change due to the different geography/geology. I intend to keep the Victoria series separate from the Jasper project; I won't use images from both areas in one composite as I feel that would compromise the locational specificity important to my work.

To the mountains, I go.

Meta-lithics IV, end-of-term sum up

Meta-lithics IV

Up there is the fourth image in the Meta-lithics series, the last piece I did this past term and last I did as an undergrad. My mentor Brad mentioned that this image, out of all that I did in this series, is the most suggestive of what might lie outside of the picture's edges, not presenting a single resolved "thing" so much as an isolated (selected) part of a landscape. I think this is a good impression to strive towards in the future, of interest especially because the potentiality is there for one to guess at shapes and movements outside of the picture frame when what lies within it is so purposefully inscrutable.

Documentation of the Grad Show install:



Putting up four prints that size, each one at around four feet wide, was a laborious task that took a few solid days of work. But thanks to the much needed assistance of Remy Anhorn, Chris Grandy, and Sam Rose, I managed to get them up on the wall without any lasting velcro-related psychological damage. Thanks also go to Ryan Popoff for storing my prints in his place til I return with a vehicle big enough to transport them.

Some of BLINK (UVic Visual Arts' photos):





All told the grad show was an amazing success and I was immensely happy to be a part of it. We put on a fine show to rival any art museum. Check out more documentation of all the stellar art, as well as a photo of me looking awkward with a crooked tie next to my mom, here.

Friday 16 March 2012

Meta-Lithics 2 and 3

I've been avoiding putting any new work up here, for all the world as though doing so would lead to some horribly disfiguring injury, like getting  punched in the face by a belligerent walrus.
Anyway. Have a look at the two recombinants I've made in the long intervening period:



Meta-lithics 2. For this I used material from mostly the same area as the first in this series. I broke out from the linearity of the previous work, including multiple angles and conflicts of perspective.




Meta-lithics 3. I decided I wanted to use images with a paler, more subtle tonality for this one. The circle of the right-hand side is purposefully unnatural, and it helped to define the rest of the composition.

Here are some installation shots:




For these images I've been making extensive use of what I call "guide layers", which are transparent, primary colored layers that overlay the image while I'm constructing it, helping me conform the raw rock to precise angles. 




Currently I'm working on having these latest works mounted to mat board, so they'll be professional-looking for the final crit and grad show. Also hoping to squeeze out one more composite.
Hopefully my ability to post work has been finally freed from the looming spectre of face-punch-by-walrus. Stay tuned.

Thursday 1 March 2012

auroras


















For my Dad.

Wednesday 25 January 2012

artist statement

Layers make up the foundation of my artistic practice, both in the literal and conceptual sense.  My photographic interests focus upon areas of land in which layers of natural and human processes have developed within the same spatial limits, and how these competing influences shape spaces over time. Areas such as neglected construction zones, time-weathered historic sites and various architectural and geographic anomalies attract my lens. Using images of these sites as source material, I import specific photographic fragments into a digital canvas, with the resulting composite image being a depiction of a hypothetical, imagined space.  This compositing technique bears some surface similarities to collage in my selection and arrangement of image fragments to construct a scene, but the completed image is a seamless envisioning of a single space. These composites retain their relevance to real-world regions and concerns due to their photographic origins, yet their interpretive possibilities are not constrained by the specifics of time and place of traditional photography.
            My work constantly feeds off of the environmental context in which it is produced, and often evolves in ways I do not expect as surprising correlations and patterns appear between image fragments as I arrange them. Despite their origins in images of real locations, my hybrid images are not so much site-specific as they are site-provoked. In creating a composite I attempt to preserve the impression and potentialities of an area but not its geographic particulars that would only resonate with someone familiar with the location. Ultimately the spaces that my amalgamations depict exist independently in their own realms of the imagination, able to be read and appreciated by those not familiar with the locations from which their source material has been gathered.
By using this method of recombinant photography I explore relations both real and hypothetical between the natural, historic and contemporary influences present in environments. I design spaces in which similarities and contrasts between these competing agencies become apparent that would be otherwise overlooked and unremarked on.  A main goal of mine is to provoke new insights into our perception of environments and spaces, by taking natural and built forms and re-imagining their context and positioning in the amalgamated image.
Layers in the physical environment correspond to layers in the digital constructed image, and it is this back-and-forth dynamic that propels my work. My composites are not intended to be directly metaphoric or allegorical to real world conditions and concerns, instead they transpose these realities into hypothetical spaces from which they can be observed from unanticipated perspectives. Old assumptions about the ordering and hierarchies of our environment break down; in the frontiers of the digital canvas the possibilities of relations between layers of time, space and processes are manifold.

Monday 23 January 2012

Meta-Lithics #1

Seems like I can only ever post something here once it's completely finished nowadays, which kind of negates the whole purpose of having a blog. A barrier of behavior that would be best broken down, I say.

Anyway. Here's the results of my latest exploration in the realms of layerdom.


Shore rocks seemingly unhewn by human hands, coalesce into precise angularities by obscure agency.

More coming soon.