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Constance Jacobson, Eleanor Rubin, and Susan Schmidt Bring Evolving Images to the Chandler Gallery

Submitted by on July 7, 2016 – 2:50 pmNo Comment

“We are all weavers of images above and below the surface,” says Eleanor Rubin, one of the three artists featured in the Chandler Gallery’s upcoming show, “Intention and Chance: Evolving Images by Constance Jacobson, Eleanor Rubin, and Susan Schmidt.” The exhibition title refers to the printmaking process—which each artist uses—and to the ways that the artist’s objectives interact with factors beyond the artist’s control. As Schmidt says, “My work is informed by chance discovery, chancing upon and taking a chance.”

Schmidt-BlackBasketSchmidt’s series of unusual baskets began with an event in a fairytale: A girl is kidnapped in a basket. Schmidt wondered what form that basket would take. Once Schmidt started drawing baskets, friends and acquaintances loaned Schmidt their strange baskets, and the series grew. In “Valda’s Basket” frantic white lines against a sepia background describe the basket’s weave, but the basket itself feels solid and balanced, with its short handle and stiff oval rim supporting wide, shallow twin bowls. However, the overlapping lines that make up “Black Drawing Basket” seem to set the tall, narrow basket spinning.

For her series Almost Biology, Jacobson was inspired by a 19th century etching by William Heath entitled “Monster Soup Commonly Called Thames Water”—a comment on the tiny aquatic organisms that microscopes had revealed—to produce her own “fabricated scientific imagery.” Her monsters, with translucent, bulbous bodies and long, stringy appendages, evoke the “evolving images” aspect of the exhibition title. The black-and-white digital prints have a photographic quality, as if the creatures had paused to pose on the microscope slide.

Rubin-Reverse MigrationRubin’s prints on slate favor accidental elements. When she inks images of birds onto broken pieces of her rooftop, she uses the slate’s ridges, depressions, and color variations to activate the images. In her series “Uncertain Journeys: Postcards to Joanne in Rome,” chance plays a hidden role. Rubin created the watercolors and collages on each postcard, selected the stamps and addressed them to her sister in Rome, but some postcards were never delivered and are missing. The remaining cards bear postal markings and other wear and tear from international travel. Says Rubin of the exhibition: “I look forward to the contrasts and the incidental relationships within the installation that will result from combining our work.”

“Intention and Chance: Evolving Images by Constance Jacobson, Eleanor Rubin, and Susan Schmidt” is on display at the Chandler Gallery from July 5 through August 5. The opening reception will be held on July 7 from 6:00-8:00 pm.

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