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ARTCAT



Meghan Gerety, American Arcadia

Spanierman Modern
53 East 58th street, 212-832-1400
Midtown
March 29 - April 28, 2007
Reception: Thursday, March 29, 6 - 8 PM
Web Site


“There have always been two kinds of arcadia: shaggy and smooth; dark and light; a place of bucolic leisure and a place of primitive panic.” —Simon Schama, Landscape and Memory

Through a physically demanding working method, in which line and shape take on a powerful life of their own, Gerety creates works that elicit our awareness of how we project our fantasies as well as our darkest horrors onto the landscape around us to suit our psychological needs. Her images-in which line and shape embody the physicality of resistance, protest, life, and transcendence-reflect on the way that, from the arcadia of ancient Greece to Olmsted’s Central Park, to Trump’s Mar-A-Lago, arcadian notions have evolved with our cultural desires and fears.

Gerety’s works also explore the ways in which throughout human history, trees and forests have had multiple meanings, representing heroic nationalism, family, royalty, cultural strength, wealth, life, resurrection, death, and rebirth. According to the artist: “Trees have been both venerated and exploited, used for both protection and propaganda. They have been home to both the `enemy’ and horror as well as a sanctuary and sacred eden on the path to salvation. The forest itself has served as an allegory for the path of human life; it has served as church, promised land, and salvation. In almost every spiritual tradition the tree functions as a symbol of renewal: in the `vegetable theology’ of the Christian Tree of Life and the two trees in the Garden of Eden.”

In her powerful yet contemplative drawings, Gerety attempts to embed the intense energy of process and the power of transcendence, while re-imagining the history of place, based on her own connection with the landscape.

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