Michelle Lopez The Untitled Thumb and Drape Project
1 May through 26 June 1999 main gallery exhibition
In her work Michelle
Lopez uses traditional materials in unconventional ways to transform
mundane objects into evocative, corporeal forms. The media Lopez
carefully chooses draw the viewer into the objects because they
engage senses of both sight and smell, and invite touch. The objects
she uses as points of departure -- boats, cars, trucks -- share
functions based on transportation, mobility, security, freedom.
In this show, Lopez continued her previous use of leather and introduced
her innovative exploration of marzipan, another material that, like
leather, takes on a flesh-like aspect in the context of her work.
In collaboration with
Sarah Bernbach, pastry chef and co-owner of "Cake," a wedding-cake
specialty firm in New York, Lopez created a funerary spectacle of
a canoe -- with its human scale and evocations of serenity -- covered
with bursting, larger-than-life wilted flowers, ivy, and butterflies,
all made of marzipan. The sugary sweet, wilting floral transformation
cast a deathlike aura on the canoe's empty skeletal frame, creating
a magical meditation on memory and the body.
In her leather construction,
Lopez substantially increased the scale of her earlier investigations
into traditional practices of hand tooled-leather design by wrapping
an automobile in hides, making visible the vehicle's arrested action.
Using buffalo skins as raw material, she applied a modified process
of scribing, where lines are cut with blades, rubbed with dental
tools, and beaten from behind so that the images swell. Lopez confined
the images to a small area on the skin, in order to heighten the
notion of imagery as wound. The result is a densely-layered hieroglyph
on a large field of leather -- a kind of perverse landscape inscribed
with a mutated tale. Like practices of ritual scarification, this
artwork exists as lesions or welts, as bruised images on flesh.
In earlier artworks
made of leather, such as Pled (1997) and Snuff (1998), Lopez's stories
start with pictures of beds or sofas -- what the artist refers to
as "domestic places of surrender." She follows those with layers
of familiar cartoon characters and logo patterns. Her interest is
in how common iconography intensely toppled onto each other are
abstracted, yet retain a sense of familiarity. In her work Michelle
Lopez creates each story within a quiet perversion of violence,
embedding memory within a surface, distilling an uncanny form that
never quite reaches recognition.
Michelle Lopez received
her B.A. in literature and art history in 1992 at Barnard College,
and she received her M.F.A in 1994 at the School of Visual Arts.
She has been exhibiting since 1996 in various groups shows and has
had solo exhibitions at Feature Inc. and Deitch Projects, both in
New York. Lopez was a recipient of the MacDowell Colony Fellowship.