The Shallow Act of Seeing
December 13, 2020 — May 16, 2021
I’m thrilled to announce my participation in the group show, The Shallow Act of Seeing at the John Michael Kohler Art Center in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. The show is curated by Laura Bickford and includes two other contemporary artists working in wood, Rachel Beach and Bayne Peterson. The show places this work in context alongside carved works from Kohler’s collection.
From the Curator: “Pushing against the very qualities that define their medium, artists Dan Gunn, Bayne Peterson, and Rachel Beach defy the physical rigidity of wood and confound expectations of its use.
Since prehistoric times, humankind has used wood to make things they need. Today, wooden objects of utility continue to dominate the landscape when we think of it: tables and chairs, bowls and spoons, building frames, pencils, and paper. Wood is strong, solid, natural; it is also abundant and versatile. But in spite of its utility, or perhaps because of it, artists have also long favored it to make objects with uses that lie beyond the purely physical. The Shallow Act of Seeing considers the work of three artists who make objects that reward the process of looking rather than simply seeing.
Inspired by his time as a set builder, Dan Gunn uses lacquered plywood to create works that appear to be draped fabric. He makes things that are both images and objects, which from a distance fool the viewer into thinking they are soft and flexible fabric. Bayne Peterson uses the concentric circles and ovals of wood, pieced together in unusual color combinations. With complex curves and seemingly impossible angles, his sculptures challenge ideas about the material qualities of wood. Rachel Beach's totemic constructions daringly balance large, solid forms atop each other in defiance of wood's presumed structural capabilities.”