Material Traces: Time and the Gesture in Contemporary Art
February 16 – April 13, 2013
Photo: Paul Litherland
In Tricia Middleton’s Crones, an excerpt from a larger installation exhibited last year at Oakville Galleries, amorphous figures of wax seem to collapse on themselves, sagging and decaying amidst an assemblage of rocks, found objects, and detritus. Suggesting a site long abandoned, Crones speaks to the obsessive byproducts of collecting, the smattering of things and materials that remain long after the spark of interest has passed. Middleton’s labour of assembling and composing become past actions, now available in almost excavatory form, the viewer imagining the process of artistic production in addition to taking in Crones’ experiential impact. This dynamic constitutes the basis of Material Traces: Time and the Gesture in Contemporary Art at Concordia University’s Leonard & Bina Ellen Art Gallery, a compelling group exhibition curated by art historian Amelia Jones.
Jones, a professor at McGill University and author of Body Art: Performing the Subject (1998), has organized a diverse set of works around “the fact that making and experiencing art are always social, interrelational, dialogical practices, always in process and taking place over time,” as she writes in the show’s catalogue. Featuring work mostly by American, Canadian, and New Zealand artists, Material Traces speaks to the already established yet continually ongoing dialogue between viewer and artwork. If Middleton’s installation brings attention to the material process of its production, it facilitates an equally material intimacy between bodies and matter — an intertwining of the body experiencing an artwork and the body having made the artwork.
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