| Solo exhibition at
Marcia Wood Gallery, February 19 - March 28,
2009. installation
images
Gregg Hill transforms the industrial detritus of our consumer
society into thoughtful, beautiful and humorous works of art by
literally smashing massive 55 and 30 gallon oil drums with a crane
and a large weight, then giving them perfectly shiny, brilliantly
colored surfaces. The use of candy colors applied to discarded
material from our consumer culture assert a kinship to Pop Art.
Hill’s works suggest Pop Art only superficially however,
as they are ultimately meditations inviting the viewer to discover
meaning beyond the observed world. The ambiguous forms and crayon
colors can also suggest toys and cartoons. Such light heartedness
is yet another subtle shift in perspective that can lead a viewer
to new perceptions. Gregg Hill lives and works in New York with
his wife and three children. He held his first solo exhibition
in New York in 2008. At the peak of his career in New York as a
leader in his industry, Hill left to embark on an inward journey
in search of a more meaningful set of values. In Vietnam, as a
Buddhist disciple, he embraced the life-long calling of an artist.
His artistic practice is also a practice in meditation, resulting
in works imbued with a palpable spiritual aura. Hill’s works
are simultaneously light heartedly playful and oddly alien. The
corroded solid metal has become fluid and soft. The bright colors
are immediately engaging, yet somehow off. The three-dimensional
object, at first so assertive, slowly reveals itself to be somehow
deflating – collapsing in on itself. The series to be exhibited
is titled “Belief”. Each work is a result of Hill’s
meditative process and represents a belief to be questioned, possibly
discarded, possibly replaced by another belief. What do we believe?
What do we believe we are seeing? What do we believe is true? Hill’s
works speak of impermanence and transformation. His titles are
clues to his investigation; “breath in breath out”, “boy
in a dream, dream in a boy” and “Non-Belief”.
Mark David Cohen writes eloquently in the 2008 Gregg Hill catalog, “The
art of Gregg Hill...... is a vision of the world dissipating, of
the world dissolving like a shifting, thinning, brightening set
of mists, a vision of all that we believed to be permanent, unalterable,
and inescapable parting like a veil, as if our three-dimensional
world of defined and definite forms were yawning open to reveal
a new dimension of new and transformative formulations-an art created
for the sake of instigating an insight into what lies beyond.” |