EXHIBITIONS/PAST/CURRENT/UPCOMING 

 

 EXHIBITIONS > ANCILLARY ADAPTATIONSMasako Miki, Caught By a Rainbow (2012), Gouache and ink on paper, Paper: 22 x 30 inches, Frame: 23.5 x 31.5 inches

April 21 - May 27, 2012
Gallery | ANCILLARY ADAPTATIONS | Masako Miki
Project | AMALGAM | Joe Penrod

Reception Saturday, April 21, 2012 6-8pm

PRESS
PRESS RELEASE
Masako Miki at Swarm Gallery, Visual Art Source

Swarm Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition of multi-media works by Masako Miki, ANCILLARY ADAPTATIONS, on view from April 21 - May 27, 2012. An installation by Joe Penrod, AMALGAM, is presented in the project space.

Masako Miki’s work explores the idea of synthesis. She manipulates contradicting spatial elements such as flatness and illusion to suggest a disoriented context. The narrative is based on her own experiences of living in the United States for seventeen years, and dilemnas of her cultural identity. Her works explore how one can truly assimilate to a foreign environment, considering both pessimism and optimism. In the constant adjustment of her own personal cultural assimilation, she has experienced feelings of perplexity, incongruity, and obscurity. Ultimately, she believes that different cultures can be hybridized to become a unique alternative one. In her process of making work, she seeks to achieve this equilibrium.

In ANCILLARY ADAPTATIONS, Miki considers personal transformation, and the necessary process of both adapting to a new environment and evolving as a person. Acknowledgement and realization is the central narrative here. Finally, insight into who she was in the past, leads to who she is now, and ultimately who she wants to become.

Miki uses deer to symbolize survival, as they are a highly adaptable species. Their ability to adjust and integrate has allowed them to subsist throughout the world. This series was inspired by the hypothesis of an alternative reality, where order in the deer’s lifecycle is challenged. The shedding and re-growth of the antlers represents a process of survival. What if the beautiful antlers keep growing until they reach the sky? What if there were no predators of deer? What is growing has to die in order to mature the process. Maybe it is okay to leave something that was part of us because it will grow again. Maybe it is also okay if we lose it forever.

Fiberglass sculpture in the exhibition was completed in collaboration with Steve Ferrera. Special thanks to Jose Loyola for his assistance.

The mundane is the object of Joe Penrod’s work. It often becomes invisible to us. Through his exploration of simple materials, he calls attention to the immaterial; turning a moment in time into an object; solidifying the brief interaction between light and eye. He is interested in impermanence and the forgotten, in the barely remembered and barely perceived.

 

ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES:
Masako Miki is a mixed media artist whose work reflects cultural identity issues with absurd and surreal narratives. Miki is a native of Japan and now lives and works in Berkeley. She received her MFA from San Jose State University. Miki has exhibited throughout the bay area including Headlands Center for the Arts, Park Life in San Francisco, the Compound Gallery in Oakland, and The San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art in San Jose. Recently, she was a residency artist at Vermont Studio Center and Wassaic Project in New York, and a nominee for the 2010 SECA art award from SFMOMA. She is a recipient of an Individual Artist Award from The Santo Foundation. Her work is available at the SFMOMA Artists Gallery, Park Life, the Swarm Gallery, and the Bay Area Visual Arts Network. Currently she is working on a public art project for the city of Berkeley.

Joe Penrod lives and works in Olympia, WA. He has shown his work in California, Oregon, Washington, Utah, Colorado, New York, and India. He earned B.F.A from Brigham Young University in 2001.

 

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