ARTFORUM
SAN FRANCISCO
CRITIC'S PICKS
PERIPHERIES OF NARRATIVE
PATRICIA SWEETOW GALLERY
JUNE 01- JULY 15
The mania for poaching art schools doesn't get quite the
same play in San Francisco, a city with less investment in
the rhythms of the art market than New York or London.
It's fitting, then, that this show of fresh MFA grads from
California College of the Arts, curated by painter Kim Anno,
exudes a calm, confident vibe. Using thread and mapping
pins with crimson heads, Katie Lewis delicately translates
physical sensations into a three-dimensional drawingÑit's
as visceral as a plastinated, Body Worlds nervous system,
only more elegant. Also dazzling are Jamie Vasta's paintings
of campground waterfalls and misty parking lots, each rendered
with varying amounts of glitter, a kitschy material that, when
used
judiciously, effectively captures shifting qualities of light and
the precarious balance between nature and culture. This
balance is also the subject of Arctic Eden, 2006, an unresolved,
color-soaked video by Susan Chen that uses funky miniature
materials to create a looping natural history that travels through
an ice age to a fiery volcanic apocalypse. More cultural
landscapes
appear in pieces by Weston Teruya, whose provocative
mixed-media works on paper articulate powerful cycles of creation
and destruction using an unlikely cosmology of carefully drawn
imagesÑdismembered guard barriers, stone lions, bundled logs,
and squares of sod. Collaging her drawings into larger
compositions,
Michele Carlson invents her own cast of characters, a posse of
women
whose fashion mixes hip-hop with pattern-intensive fabrics that evoke
traditional Asian and African styles. Voluminous dresses billow as
the
women travel via airplane or fall towards the ground on an ornate,
elevator-like machine, suggesting, as most of these artists do,
that
they're going somewhere interesting in their own sweet time.
Glen
Helfand