Gravity of the Unsubstantiated | two-person exhibition | Rare Visions Gallery Project | Summer 2021
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Untitled (Paper Textile Nr.2)
risograph prints and collage
46x68 inches
2020 -
Untitled (Paper Textile Nr.4)
risograph prints and collage
46x72 inches
2020 -
Untitled (Paper Textile Nr.4)
risograph prints and collage
46x72 inches
2020 -
Untitled (Paper Textile Nr. 6)
risograph prints and collage
60x73 inches
2021 -
close up
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Untitled (Paper Textile Nr.1)
risograph prints and collage
50x83 inches
2020 -
Untitled (Paper Textile Nr.3)
risograph prints and collage
41x70 inches
2020 -
Untitled (Paper Textile Nr.5)
risograph prints and collage
53x86 inches
2020 -
close up
Gravity of the Unsubstantiated / two-person exhibition / Rare Visions Gallery Project / Boulder, CO / 2021
Gravity of the Unsubstantiated brings together the works of Michelle Grabner and Monika Plioplyte. In their respective works, the body becomes the link to spirituality, nature, and the everyday. Grabner often acknowledges the presence of a body engaged in work and craft focusing on materials that suggest engagement with domesticity and everyday life. Through an idiosyncratic painting process, she has developed a minimalist style that references the spiritual. Plioplyte uses elements of patterning and repetition also in a ritualistic fashion that suggests the body in motion. Grabner and Plioplyte find commonality in the process and the materiality of the act of making. Both artists consider natural elements like patterning that are then juxtaposed with objects that are brought into the outdoors like picnic table cloths and clothing. The different elements of these works are contextualized in a living space that also acknowledges the domestic and outdoor spaces of Boulder, CO.
*Images by Benjamin McQuillan
Gravity of the Unsubstantiated brings together the works of Michelle Grabner and Monika Plioplyte. In their respective works, the body becomes the link to spirituality, nature, and the everyday. Grabner often acknowledges the presence of a body engaged in work and craft focusing on materials that suggest engagement with domesticity and everyday life. Through an idiosyncratic painting process, she has developed a minimalist style that references the spiritual. Plioplyte uses elements of patterning and repetition also in a ritualistic fashion that suggests the body in motion. Grabner and Plioplyte find commonality in the process and the materiality of the act of making. Both artists consider natural elements like patterning that are then juxtaposed with objects that are brought into the outdoors like picnic table cloths and clothing. The different elements of these works are contextualized in a living space that also acknowledges the domestic and outdoor spaces of Boulder, CO.
*Images by Benjamin McQuillan