| Online Feature & Preview: Gail Potocki |
| Wednesday, 05 November 2008 | ||
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Opened Apples, is Chicago-based Symbolist artist Gail Potocki's new solo exhibit. The show will display twenty-eight environmentally charged pieces at Billy Shire Fine Arts in Culver City, opening November 15 at 7 p.m. ![]() Red Spirals "Comprising twenty-three oil paintings and five large-scale charcoal drawings, Opened Apples reveals the artist's intense ecological anxiety. 'Humanity's ignorance and indifference has unleashed a chain of devastating decay', says Potocki. ![]() Desert Pearls -BSFA ***** Here begins HF's interview with Gail:Hi-Fructose: Is there a difference between what people tell you about what they see in your art and what you express with it? ![]() Plastic Vortex GP: For the last few years I have focused heavily on environmental themes with my work. I think the stresses humans are putting on the ecosystem are the most serious problems we are facing, so it is difficult for me to paint about more personal issues or to do humorous work. I am always thinking about how fragile the world really is and how close elements of it are to collapsing. I think of the apple as a symbolic representation of the earth and, of course from the story of the Garden of Eden, as paradise. In the painting "Opened Apples" for example, a woman is taking bites out of apples and throwing them to the ground. It represents humans' careless disregard for the natural world and wasteful consumption. The idea of "Opened Apples" made me think of how we have savagely bitten into the symbolic "earth" apple and left it to turn brown and rot. Also, when I thought of the title I was thinking of the opening of Pandora's Box as a metaphor of what we are doing by "opening the apple" and unleashing unforeseen consequences. ![]() Tiara HF: What catches your attention? GP: The sky often does, which is problematic when I am driving. I am so intrigued by its varying colors and variety of clouds---particularly in the fall with its intense blue and raking light. At least that is the way it is in Chicago. ![]() Synthetic Sea ![]() Corrupted Mother GP: Some of my favorite painters influence me more with mood than with technique. The Belgian symbolist painter, Fernand Khnopff, is high on my list. When I discovered his work I knew I wanted to be an artist that could convey that strong of a poetic and profound silence and sense of mystery. That is still what I try to infuse in much of my work. I also love Anthony Van Dyck for his elegant portraits and Edward Munch for the way his paintings can carry a sense of anxiety so intensely. ![]() Oasis GP: I was a very late bloomer and did not start seriously drawing and painting until I was 40. I thought about a lot of the ideas that are now in my paintings way before then, but didn't find my voice until much later. * ![]() Thaw Gallery Preview... Billy Shire Fine Arts, an internationally renowned gallery just outside of Los Angeles, is the most recent endeavor of art world heavy-weight Billy Shire, a major figure in the establishment of Pop Surrealism. In 2006, Potocki was the subject of The Union of Hope and Sadness: The Art of Gail Potocki, a stunning hardcover by art historian Thomas Negovan. A second book, featuring the art in Opened Apples, will be released on December 15.
Billy Shire Fine Arts |
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