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Iron Pastorals
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In this
new series of work, I employ salvaged sheet metal to create work that evokes
the memory of Chicago's farmland roots on formed remnants of today's industrialized
world. I build up surfaces on formally constructed found metal “canvases”
to reflect the struggle of savage and urbane forces and to illustrate the
influence humankind has over the land.
The title of the exhibition is “Iron Pastorals”, which
simply means, paintings of rural and natural scenes on discarded objects
of industry and culture. The title of the series of work was inspired
by a book of poetry by almost the same name, “The Iron Pastoral” published
in 1947 by Chicago poet John Frederick Nims. Like other writers of the
time, Nims observed how Chicago had grown out of the meeting of prairie and
lakeshore into a discordant field of buildings and commerce
I do believe that we have a responsibility
to find a balance between our development and the environment. We
have sought progress at the expense of the surrounding ecosystems. I
am fascinated by how nature also continues to progress, and constantly
reclaims what we have built. I use such degraded materials in my
work to explore our connection to the environment and the juxtaposition
of the modern world with nature.
© 2009 Curtis Frillmann
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