Looking at ways in which artists bring their heritage, their personal stories, and their hands into their electronic/digital art has long been a research thrust and influence upon my own art practice. I look to both the approach and techniques of traditional fine artists as much as I look to the logic, power, and open-endedness of experimental computer pioneers. I merge manipulated/painted and photographic imagery with digital mark-making through line, motif, and texture, using a complex layering process. Allowing just the right amount of one layer’s imagery to blend with another’s can be seen as a metaphor for the balance between the old and the current. This suggests a dichotomy concerning what is handmade and digitally made, which curators have labeled as my delicate balance between the hand and machine. Enabling the organic or more human to reassert itself over the machine has been a constant focus in my work.
There are societal concerns, often linked to the personal stories mentioned above, ever-present in my work as well; social justice and specifically refugee crises, environmentalism and feminism are referenced. As I produced work in the second decade of the 21stcentury, I researched the art and literature of 20thcentury genocides and mass migrations, such as the Holocaust, and applied artistry and visual technology to respond to this all-too-persistent plight of humanity. The Syrian refugee crisis, ethnophobia, and the rise of white supremacism in the US and Europe only intensifies the need to look at, reflect upon and discuss such plagues of our day, a repeating pattern laid down long ago. In my current work, I present varied depictions of this forced emigration ‘the flight from terror and danger’ from ancient times to the present with a focus on African colonialism and the Middle East/Syrian situation. While the experience of war, genocide, and slavery are obviously wretched, I seek to seduce the viewer with color, pattern and materials, only to then offer up this painful subtext. I am not interested in ghastly imagery, but rather in luring someone in and creating a thought-provoking moment.
Leslie Nobler: Book of Heroines
There is a dimensional, evocative artist’s book of unsung creative, inspiring heroes that I have envisioned and hoped to produce for some time now. Before quarantine, my approved plan was to study Congregation Agudath Israel’s library of Eastern European, mostly former USSR, 18th – 20thcentury books, including folklore, illustrations, and religious art/Judaica, primarily investigating social justice-probing stories. Based on those, I would execute drawings, usually portraits highlighting inspiring moments or people from the 20th century. Working off the drawings, I planned to produce mixed media artworks, in paper and fiber, to become the pictorial content of the proposed artist’s book. Since my library research had to be cut off at its heels, I have worked with online substitutes, and begun my suite of portrait mono-prints…. here a few of my heroes are anonymous women who survived WWII and the Holocaust (and made their way as immigrants to North America), creative mothers of major American artists (also immigrants), and a nurse who helped saved Jewish children. I always incorporate historical/political research into my artworks which is ever so important now, in times like these!
Price | $500 |
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