opening reception Saturday
16 February from 5 pm to 7 pm
exhibition runs 16 February
through 20 April 2002
at Los Angeles Contemporary
Exhibitions
6522 Hollywood Boulevard
Los Angeles CA 90028
PRESS CONTACT: Julie
Deamer
LOS ANGELES, December
21, 2001 -- Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions presented a new
installation by Sarah Seager entitled 188 loose elements things
like pure sound associations improvisational jazz free form where
in principal everything is equal the id and the superego supersystems.
An opening reception took place on Saturday 16 February from 5:00
pm to 7:00 pm. For images and additional information please call
323.957.1777.
It is the moments of
connection and disconnection, presence and absence, visibility and
invisibility which are recurrent themes in the work of Sarah Seager.
She does not limit her use of materials to paint, photography, or
collage, though she has used each of these as well as axe handles,
old personal correspondence, and white record albums.
For her new installation
at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, Seager composed a dialogue
about blindness, invisibility and the desire for vision. The text
is sand blasted on large panes of glass which lean precariously
against the walls and floor, acting as cue cards for the "actors"
in this dialogue. The "actors" are represented by paper
sculptures which are carefully balanced on the floor and can be
easily shifted or transformed by a stir in the air, such as the
passing of a viewer. The changing relationship between the paper
sculptures; how they wrinkle and fold, if and how they touch, or
how the light reflects off their surfaces, is at the center of this
work. She also incorporated some of her earlier sculptures into
the installation, such as an axe handle piece and her sculpture
of multi-colored tacks "Why do we circulate all these papers
when everyone says it will make no difference?" allowing the
viewer to examine the relationships and recurring themes within
Seager's past and present work.
The fleeting, elusive
nature of everyday human interactions is an ongoing interest in
Seager's work. Curator Marilu Knode wrote: "...Seager seeks
the human self, lost in the arbitrariness of language and the overabundance
of worldly objects." She encourages the audience to create
their own meaning for her work by producing sculptures and other
objects which lack any obvious association or reference. By doing
so, Seager asks theviewer to recognize and contemplate the subtle
and often neglected aspects of life which, for Seager, are the most
important.
Los Angeles Times art
critic Christopher Knight described her work as "spare, mixed
media minimalism [that] has an unexpected dadaist edge of great
wit and provocation." Sarah Seager is not an artist from whom
one can predict what will come next.
Sarah Seager's work has
been included in exhibitions at The Museum of ContemporaryArt, Los
Angeles, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, The Whitney Museum,
andWestfalischer Kunstverein in Munster, Germany as well as many
other local, national, andinternational galleries. She teaches at
Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA.