Technique Domestique Unique
Handkerchief |
Chicago Tangelo |
Somethin' Growing Here |
It Was Miami Regrowth (All Is Not Lost)
By Tom Wachunas
“In this exhibition you will see materials like my family’s
discarded pizza lids, vintage handkerchiefs, furniture, IKEA curtains, yarn,
and other household materials…I explore the relationship between domestic
materials and abstraction. These paintings push the boundaries of what a
painting can be, while using everyday objects with joy, playfulness, and all
the messy, raw layers of domestic life…”
- excerpt from the artist statement by Katie Davis
EXHIBIT: Raw Material – work by Katie Davis, at
Massillon Museum STUDIO M, through July 14, 2024 / 121 Lincoln Way East,
downtown Massillon / Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9:30 am – 5:00 pm, Sunday
2:00-5:00 pm / 330.833.4061
https://www.katiekdavis.com/ https://www.instagram.com/kdavisstudio/
A few days after
seeing this exhibit, I chanced upon this curious statement posted on Facebook: ”Art
is not meant to match your curtains. It’s meant to speak to your soul.”
A snarky, snide, and silly dictate if ever there was one. And needlessly
dismissive. As if curtains (or pizza boxes or couches or laundry piles) can’t
possibly be art.
In her statement
for this exhibit, Katie Davis wrote further that those “messy, raw layers of
domestic life” embraced / implied in her art were born in the context of
challenging stay-at-home motherhood. Her paintings/collages became a satisfying
way of processing the endless demands of domestic labor. “These moments of
revelry were pure abstraction, arrangement,” she muses, “and something that
verged on design and madness.”
Madness? Only of a
sort. Maybe better to think of it as compelling wildness. There’s no morose
insanity here. No hopeless or brooding darkness. Katie Davis invests her delightful
accoutrements of domesticity with exquisite tactility, all suffused with
bright, vibrant colors.
I felt an ineffable
presence of childlike songfulness. Rhythms and rhymes, delicate and bold,
filling the air of a household now transported to an art gallery. In her
ambitious installation work called “Somethin’ Growing Here,” Davis invites viewers
to relax on the loveseat. It’s not just a piece of ordinary furniture. It’s a
painting in itself.
So go ahead and sit.
Look out at all those tunes lining the gallery walls. Sing along with the
pulsing, illuminated soul of an artist mother.
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