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Kate Bonner

Possible Event

May 17 - June 28, 2014

Kate Bonner An intervening object, 2014 Digital prints on MDF, stick ​68 x 43 in.

Kate Bonner
An intervening object, 2014
Digital prints on MDF, stick
68 x 43 in

Kate Bonner In only one direction Digital prints on MDF 40 x 30 in.

Kate Bonner
In only one direction, 2014
Digital prints on MDF
40 x 30 in. 

 

Kate Bonner Weak signals, 2014 Digital prints on MDF 24 x 32 x 24 in.

Kate Bonner
Weak signals, 2014
Digital prints on MDF
24 x 32 x 24 in.

 

Kate Bonner Every point is the center, 2014 Digital prints on MDF ​30 x 35 in.

Kate Bonner
Every point is the center, 2014
Digital prints on MDF
30 x 35 in.

Kate Bonner In two places at once, 2014 Digital prints on MDF, stick 36 x 48 in.

Kate Bonner
In two places at once, 2014
Digital prints on MDF, stick
36 x 48 in.

Kate Bonner An effect like fast forwarding, 2014 Digital prints on MDF 75 x 55 in.

Kate Bonner
An effect like fast forwarding, 2014
Digital prints on MDF
75 x 55 in.

Kate Bonner Out of another one, 2014 Digital prints on MDF ​48 x 36 in.

Kate Bonner
Out of another one, 2014
Digital prints on MDF
48 x 36 in.

Press Release

Time is slipping.  A moment ago this image stood alone. Now it catches against that other one. It flips upside down. The pixels snag, are turned into paint. One pixel becomes liquid and is stretched, poured, smoothed over the surface of the image. With digital tools, one photograph is painted into the fabric of another. Two moments appear as parallel visions, torn and spliced together.

Through a process of reduction and transformation, Kate Bonner’s work withholds explanation and proposes simple fictions. Using digital brushes, power tools, and a language of fragmentation, she seeks to expand space, to break through the surface of the image. Her work is an attempt to see in, around and under images.  It questions limits and points of entry. 

Kate Bonner began this process of questioning with progress shots and reference photos of drawings and paintings.  In these off-frame photos, and later scans and photocopies, she sought out objects that could operate as mere objects rather than symbols.  She began cutting apart photographs, folding them, rolling them, and flipping them around in an attempt to use representational imagery for formal, abstract purposes; to deny a story. 

In Possible Event, multiple images are located in one frame. The images are points in time, spliced into a location.  As moments, the images compete with each other, and submit to each other inside the confines of a flattened plane.  Each piece has a front and a back; mounted rather than framed, they operate like snapshots – folding, bending, leaning.  There are borders and frames inside the image (both around the rims of the photographs, and around the edge of the digital print), while cuts and folds in the work turn the room into an even larger frame. Discarding any distinction between sculpture, photography, and installation, Kate Bonner acknowledges our human desire to investigate, to know, to mentally construct, while simultaneously confounding it. 

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