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Oscillation:
No. 5: 27.75 x 27.75 x 2.25”
Terra cotta, slip, glaze |
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Distant memory, sensuous undulations, fragments of time...
The visual poetry of Jason H. Green's tile speaks in a language of patience and
introspection. There are echoes of paradox in his art. Decorative surfaces
suggest the vernacular of architectural ornament. They combine with the
methodical application of glazes resulting in rivulets of spontaneity,
fragments arranged together never to become whole.
Green's father built houses, so he
was often exposed to the "layering of skin on skeleton" as he
witnessed the building in process. In his own renovation work, Green remembers
how a fragment of wallpaper held memories of past occupants. His tile
sculptures evoke the depths of time. Molded low relief curves and revealed matt
terra cotta are submerged in watery glazes. Receding black spaces form an
arabesque of windows gazing into a furtive interior. Edges are chipped and raw,
their unfinished and imperfect borders signifying ruin, vestiges of a larger
structure, rescued but incomplete.
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Installation of
exhibit: Ornament Now 2006,
Fosdick-Nelson Gallery |
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The discovery of wooden molds at a functioning brick factory
were the basis for making his own molds with plaster and wood components. He
hand presses clay into molds that include both convex and concave shapes. His
unique modular mold making system results in "reconfigurable elements that
share the intrinsic geometry found in nature." Historical textures are
obtained by transferring a thin layer of slip onto the surface using embossed
vintage wallpaper. He allows the brushed glazes to drip and puddle at the
bottom edges emulating the pull of gravity and the fluid progression of
existence. "Recently," Green remarks, "I have been working with
very glossy and runny transparent glazes that add depth to the surface by
revealing a build up of underlying layers." His aim is to "create
surfaces that reveal their own history."
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| Jason in his studio at
Watershed Center for the Arts in Maine |
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The wave is a distinct motif suggesting currents, both
electrical and aquatic. His predominate palette of verdant greens, light iron
yellows and lush cobalt blues anchored by the earthen red-orange terra cotta
speak of an atmosphere of sea and sky. He layers analogous hues and reveals
"subtle references to the ever shifting color and color spaces in our
environment." The chipped, cracked and uneven wash of color first repels
us with uncomfortable thoughts of imperfection and decay and then transfixes us
with shimmering reflective beauty. Green, who received his MFA from Alfred
University in 1998, is now concerned with "characteristics of immediacy
while alluding to the past." He has recently created "fields that
suggest the vastness of landscape and the results of weather and erosion."
His work invites us to question what we cannot see and remember what we should
not forget.
For more information, visit
www.jasonhgreen.com.
By: Stephanie
Posted: January 4, 2011 11:42 AM
By: Kristen Kieffer
Posted: January 5, 2011 8:38 AM
By: Maryellen
Posted: January 5, 2011 10:24 AM
Great work!