Jane Buyers,Suzy Lake, Donald Baechler, Jim Dine, Jay Isaac, Paul Morrison and Cy Twombly
Natural Selection
September 8 - October 7, 2006
As far as I can tell, the beauty of research lies in its
functional ability as a mechanism that can unite an idea developing within
the self to the outside world. When applied to the practice of an artist
this idea can be viewed as a quest for the next essential image around the
next essential corner. When applied to the practice of a curator this idea
can be viewed as a quest for the next essential concept around the next essential
corner. Image and concept are interchangeable. So too can be artist and
curator.
I wonder about the role of fate and circumstance in the
act of scientific research versus the artist’s choice of subject or a path
of curatorial inquiry: the structured networks of branch and stem and leaf
that make plants all so different and yet so all alike.
The consideration of subject matter can sometimes be viewed
as an array of dots that at some point cohere into a pattern. Discovering
the pattern comes as a result of connecting the dots. When I came across
Cy Twombly’s Natural History, Part II, I was one month and two artists into
the five months and seven artists worth of research that resulted in Natural
Selection. With the discovery of Twombly’s botanical print his work as I
knew it had been transformed and the title and concept for this show became
clear.
In early June I contacted Jay Isaac to find out what he
was up to. He had recently vacated Toronto for St John’s, New Brunswick,
to spend the summer in his hometown. He told me that he was making observational
paintings in gouache on paper of trees and plant life. I told him about
the show I was working on and some of the artists I was thinking about.
Shortly thereafter I was bound for Switzerland and the art fair in Basel
where I encountered the work of mid-career British artist Paul Morrison.
I found paintings in two stands and a series of new silkscreens in a third.
Attracted to his work in general I became absorbed by the silkscreens and
the use of 15th and 16th century botanical woodblock prints as source material.
And I became aware of the deep horizon lines, an observation that would later
influence their formally juxtaposed placement in the show with Isaacs’ flora-laced
landscapes.
There are several curatorial arcs that can be traced and
retraced when considering the functions of time in this show. There is the
timeline for the works themselves (1975-2006, and back to the 15th century
in the case of Morrison’s source material) and of the artists themselves,
from Jay Isaac through generations to Cy Twombly. There is the idea of subject
matter withstanding the test of time, and of artists and their relative commercial
and critical successes over the spans of their careers, to which ideas we
bring the forces of economy, both intellectual and of commerce, and the contemplation
of Darwin and his survival of the fittest. And then there are the cultures
and the borders, from Britain, Canada, Italy and the United States, and again
that which makes things so different and then so all alike.
And the gentle beating hand on the gentle beating land.
I’ve been able to extend this show a couple of extra days, to Wednesday October 11, 2006.