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“Some
people collect for investment. Some collect for pleasure. Some folks do it
to learn about history.
And
some people "save things" because it helps them to fill a gaping
hole, calm fears, erase insecurity.
For them,
collecting provides order in their lives and a bulwark against the chaos
and terror of an
uncertain
world. It serves as a protectant against the destruction of everything
they've ever loved.”
--Judith
Katz-Schwartz
Clinging is the origin of this entire mass of
suffering & stress.”--Buddha
“I
can think of no better expression to characterize these similarities than
‘family resemblances’…” --Ludwig Wittgenstein
Sally
Curcio’s new body of work, “Family Resemblances,” explores
collections of everyday objects through assemblages.
“Family Resemblances” refers to Ludwig Wittgenstein’s theory
that words cannot be unequivocally defined by clear and specific
characteristics, but rather through usage and a “train of
associations” that emerges historically.
This theory indicated there is no solid meaning, or essences.
Wittgenstein left us with an uncomfortable uncertainty.
Curcio explores our need, in the face of this uncertainty, to
categorize, collect and stabilize meaning.
This body of work, as with her past work, presents three defining
features. First, the work is a gestalt: each piece informs the other
pieces. Secondly, as in past shows, a wide variety of media is used to
express her chosen topic. And
finally, Curcio takes a potentially dark theme and reverses it into
lightness with the pure visual pleasure of her constructions.
In
“Family Resemblance,” Curcio uses an array of materials:
gumballs, dominoes, false eyelashes, toy guns, lottery tickets,
bottle caps, underwear, arms from dolls, and watercolor paint squares.
Curcio shapes these objects into assemblages that evoke our
fascination with categorizing and collecting objects, and our bent to be
connoisseurs: each work obliges us to compare, contrast, rank, and
critique a collection. Curcio’s collections comically summons this
impulse into action and we can observe ourselves working over the pieces
in terms of this process. Curcio’s
set of collections points deeper into our personal need for completion,
control and recognition. The
individual pieces suggest, in a self-consciously naïve way, a complete
set of objects, an exhaustion of possibilities, and an ironic and absurd
self-satisfaction in the display of these collections to others.
She teaches us that these collections attempt to be an oasis of
self-identity, certainty and completion.
Each
of Curcio’s pieces deliberately confronts us with an alien obsessive
attention to precision and order suggesting an unconscious urgency.
This translates positively into visually satisfying pieces that
evoke the simplicity and “cleanness” of minimalism, the freshness
of op art, and the familiarity of folk art.
The shapes are simple and satisfying, the colors are bright, the
work beautifully neat and the materials surprisingly familiar, albeit
re-contextualized. With these
simulated collections the artist has gathered a gallery of evidence that
speaks to our perpetual drive to somehow, in some way, take control and
make sense of things.
JM Wilson III,
Ph.D.
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