SciArt Magazine - All Issues | Page 29

Re-sampling (2013). Exhibition location: Westchester Community College, Valhalla, NY. 9’ 3” x 10’ x 4”. Beeswax, tree resin, muslin, brass, graphite. Photo credit: Fred Hatt. them digitally. The layering and cropping effects this technology offers speed up the making, although I still subject this work to the same methodology as my hand drawings. I see the relationship of each visual translation to its predecessor as linear, orderly, and progressive because I know the sequence has a direct connection to my current inquiry. But should you view these visual considerations, you would not see them as sequential, for you are not carrying around all the notes, experiences, readings, and conversations that I have been exposed to. Understanding the disjunction between what I know and what you see—because you, the viewer, are missing so many particulars—I now think of my visual documentation as information that “skips a generation.” Finally, there is a fallow period. I walk away for a bit, let my mind’s dust settle and, hopefully, forget a bit of what I’ve learned in order to move the work to the next place less encumbered by facts. I will step back into hand drawing the digitally altered works, or continue to alter the last digital drawing. Eventually I reach SciArt in America April 2014 what feels like a logical stopping point, where the process leads me into making an environment. MG: What roles do scale and repetition play in your work? LF: I’m interested in installation-based work where the architecture serves as the “host”, the art as the contagion, and the viewer the next victim. In each installation, the viewer is confined and isolated to a restricted area—not quite quarantined, but definitely steered in a particular direction. Implementation of Adaptation pushes the viewer to the perimeter of a gallery. A Pattern of Connections requires you to be constantly looking above you. This physical relationship of the viewer to the work immediately and compellingly shifts the perspective of macro (human) and micro (contagion). I’m drawn to Eva Hesse’s suggestion that if something is meaningful it might be worth repeating. It’s not possible to think that the making or telling of the same thing over and over again hasn’t led to mutation or exaggeration. This becomes part of the visual folklore. Diseases mutate, as does human information 29