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ARTIST'S STATEMENT
My painting occurs in relation to presence - the presence in a room, in between things,
in open space, in light. It is this quality of presence, always available within the phenomenal
world, which my work investigates. I am interested in how this sense of presence shifts
and adjusts as our experience of the world changes, in a daily way, from hour to hour
and moment to moment; an ontological inquiry within a dialectic of the objective and subjective.
How does the attempt at the representation of presence and the accompanying form change as our
apprehension of presence changes? How does a painting language shift to accommodate those aspects
of our changing subjectivity? Additionally, there is the parallel and interrelated problem of the
work achieving and embodying its own presence, not merely as a reflection, but as an extension,
adding to the fabric of the world. To the extent that this is achieved, the work may perform
reflexively, focusing our attention back to the phenomenal world, in a state of inquiry and attention.
While painting I am in a three-way dialogue, between the piece of the world that I am observing, my inner
subjective response, and the accretion of marks and formal needs of the painting. I am exploring the world
in front of me, a still life, flowers, an empty room with a few chairs, perhaps a person sitting. As I
continue this investigation I find that there are different modes of transaction and translation, different
modes of painting language that conjure up differing experiences of presence. When these different modalities
are juxtaposed, as for example, distinct canvases within a triptych, they create a synergy of presence that
I find not available by any one of them alone.
Although the resultant appearance of the work may be seen as a postmodern investigation of the juxtaposition of
different painting styles my interest lies more directly in the investigation and apprehension of a pre-conceptual
sense of presence -- more phenomenological than post-structural.
I believe it is through the identification of the self with a pre-conceptual and pre-linguistic sense of being that
actual change occurs. While our identification remains within the confines of discursive thought and language our model
of the world remains one of fragmentation and conflict. Language isn't to blame - it's just the way it works. Actual
change occurs through a shift in our identification of the self and the growing awareness
of the essential and indivisible fabric of reality. It is to an investigation of this sheer presence, which is not
only pre-conceptual but also resides before and between form, that my work is committed.
Jordan Wolfson – January 2008
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