Artist’s
Notes on Paintings on Computer Circuit Boards
Working inside the silent blackness of a sinister night in the country.
Quiet as a moonless ghosting a desire grows, a conscious need to dissipate
yet control the structural formality of a framework already designed
to dispel anarchy. There is empathy to an order in those synthetic spectral
labyrinths, weaving through ethereal technical umbilical cords of a computer
Motherboard. Within the sparkling magical surface maze a supernatural
image appears in the pattern, a mirage of shapes entwining a possible
understanding of what it is to be human in a digital existence. Policing
the cyberwaves of the unconscious and dragging the simple idiocy of the
Digital Revolution back through the tangles of spiritualism, back through
Pagan ritual, battles between Good and Evil, lust and duty, sin and innocence. The subject painted can be depictions of the counting of Geomancy, the layers
of Kabalistic achievement, the Evil Eye of Witchcraft dispelled for the Medieval
Pagan. A Judeo-Christian allegory defines new lusts as coiling serpents from
Hell are covered with the crude communication psychosis of Cyberland. In Internetland
sex is only display, (no stroking) as cold as the stars, the throb of more gold
for the depicted bodies the only relief. Between the shiny sharp circuitry points
and digital diagrams, these spiritual images mollify a fear of the unknown, a
miasma of the void.
The image, sometimes a fanciful chimera, tarot card queen or long lost Goddess,
is caught inside between this real object and the new virtual world. Every meaning
has no meaning in our Postmodern spiritual vacuum as images and words can mimic
higher thought and base curiosity in the same instant. I give you an amulet,
a talisman, as you are now, a computed entity in a computed process, this digital
system now living as we do, alive within us, now all universal travellers in
space and time. Alexis Hunter 2005 Motherboards Made since 1999 Prizes:
In the Internet Age - Nelson 2000 Award
Shown:
Prizes: In the Internet Age - Nelson 2000 Award. NZ
University of Cambridge - UK
Whitespace gallery solo show - NZ
Conference of International Copyrighters - UK
The Mall galleries 20 years of DACS - UK
The Glasgow Art Fair (Whitespace Gallery) - UK
Collections:
The Wallace Collection NZ Reviewed:
The Auckland Star NZ
Reproduced:
Catalogue the mall galleries 20 years of DACS
Catalogue and web site. The Glasgow Art Fair
Web site 2004 the Foundation of Women’s Art
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