GREENAWAY ART GALLERY  

 

JENNY WATSON   work cv essay  

 

“For 25 years my work has been concerned with possible relationships between text and image in a conceptual/minimal installation dialogue...”

(excerpt from artist statement)

 

Undercover artist statement, 2008
Artist statement
 
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Artists Statement

For 25 years my work has been concerned with possible relationships between text and image in a conceptual/minimal installation dialogue.
I tend to work with selected fabrics of standard width that are then put aside until an appropriate image is found. These fabrics are usually standard dress fabric widths, and the length is cut to be roughly analogous to my height. These fabrics are sometimes stretched or left unstretched. I do self portraits, images of horses, highly subjective images based on memory that are then put with a text. The images are painted sparely for maximum effect. Sometimes horeshair, buttons, images from magazines are applied to the surface.
The text could be snatches of dialogue from a film or a list of some personal significance.
The text can be humorous, deadpan, highly emotional, found etc. One is left uncertain whether the text relates to the image. It is the dialogue between these random aspects of everyday life that I am interested in.
In this way a space opens up between the text and the image.

Jenny Watson

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Undercover

By chance I met Pat and Howard Frederick in 1991 when I was planning my first show in New York. I met them in Albury, NSW, where they had been living for some years. They were about to return to the United States and invited me to come to Tucson, Arizona after my opening in New York. As a completely New York obsessed artist the rest of the USA was ‘til then a complete blur, but I took them up on their invitation. The plane descended in the vast desert with blue mountains framing the background, an old rusty steel tower with ramshackle letters announced TUCSON. I fell in love with the place immediately. Tucson and particularly the Frederick residence has been a home away from home when travelling since that time. Pat is a veterinarian, an accomplished dressage rider and trainer and artist. We had lots to talk about and we haven’t stopped talking.

The works in Undercover were made last December/January in the Tucson winter - blue skies, cold mornings, sunny days and walking from inside to outside studio spaces. During my stay I was looking back through a mist at my suburban Australian memories. Although I’d layered fabric over fabric before, there seemed now a necessity to further veil (or cover) the images psychologically and physically, accentuating distant and blurred memories, and as a step to challenging the traditional perception of the painted surface.

Jenny Watson
Brisbane
September 2008