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PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Through; November 28, 2009
Start Date: October 22, 2009
October 22 - November 28, 2009
Opening Reception: Thursday, October 22, 7:00 p.m.
- 9:00 p.m.
Susanna Starr - Not
So Domestic: Veneer Doilies
Susanna Starr (New York) will present her recent
series of wood sculptures in her first solo exhibition at Marcia
Wood Gallery.
Susanna Starr lives and works in New York City. She has exhibited
in group shows at Marcia Wood Gallery in 2003 and 2004. This will
be her first solo exhibition at Marcia Wood Gallery. Starr earned
a BFA in sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art, an
MFA in sculpture at Yale, and has studied at Skowhegan School of
Painting and Sculpture. Starr has received numerous awards including
an Edward F. Albee Foundation Residency, Montauk, NY, and a NY
Found for the Arts, Artist’s Fellowship Grant, and has been
written about extensively in publications including Art Review,
The New York Times, NY Arts Magazine, and New Art Examiner among
others. Starr has exhibited in museums, art centers and galleries
across the U.S. beginning in 1986, including Museum of Contemporary
Art, Fort Collins, CO (solo 2002), Harwood Art Center, Albuquerque,
NM (solo 2000), Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, NY, Dieu Donne
papermill, NYC, White Columns, NYC, Harn Museum of Art, Gainesville,
FL.
Susanna Starr is known for her sculptures and hybrids of sculpture
and painting that employ a range of material. From sponges saturated
with gallons of paint, to painted, cut and layered mylar, to delicate
wall works of wood veneer with designs meticulously cut out, Starr’s
practice employs a talent for translating materials in unexpected
ways. Hallmarks of her works are an exploration of formal issues
of medium and process, a witty sense of play, a carefully balanced
tension resulting from the contradictory use of material. The upcoming
exhibition presents wall works of wood veneers cut into out-scaled
yet delicate doily shapes.
Susanna Starr, Artist Statement 2009; In my work, the handcrafted
object is a way to create unexpected transformations out of the
ordinary or the familiar; shifting process and material as a way
to uncover something new. I am particularly interested in the dynamic
between material and image. For the past several years, I have
been developing a body of work that combines images of vintage
crochet doilies with a micro-thin wood veneer. Using a penknife
to cut intricate patterns into the veneer, these pieces are essentially
monumental paper cuts. The wood veneer imparts a rich substantial
surface that is finished with traditional varnish or rubbed with
oil. In this body of work, the furniture and the innocuous crocheted
doilies that are used to protect and decorate its surfaces have
morphed into one large, absurdly delicate object, compressing and
distorting both image and material. Humorous, contradictory, and
quietly subversive, the doily has gone wild and the wood has been
fully domesticated.

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