Future Cats Career Box
FUTURE CATS CAREER BOX seeks to answer the timeless question: What are words, shapes, and lines without the meaning we assign to them? How do we create order in our own lives? Garrol Gayden鈥檚 layers of text meld into renderings of his lifelong love, Coney Island, at times becoming opaque and unreadable. Sara Malpass鈥檚 ceramic wall text pieces present the artist鈥檚 own words in her own hand, and the viewer is open to interpret each text in the way that they please. James Rosa鈥檚 geometric drawings show an appreciation and careful consideration of composition and are reminiscent of vintage TV sets, radios, and other simplified machinery. For Jesus Salas, lists of numbers layered over abstract paintings become an attempt to record and order his surrounding environment. Making his New York debut, Jamie Berube鈥檚 Towers of Colors series are reminiscent of DNA strands, and the lists and drawings on the reverse of each work show this ordering system applied in text. Linda Haskell transforms existing imagery into a frenzy of line and tone, as seen in her Horses series.
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FUTURE CATS CAREER BOX seeks to answer the timeless question: What are words, shapes, and lines without the meaning we assign to them? How do we create order in our own lives? Garrol Gayden鈥檚 layers of text meld into renderings of his lifelong love, Coney Island, at times becoming opaque and unreadable. Sara Malpass鈥檚 ceramic wall text pieces present the artist鈥檚 own words in her own hand, and the viewer is open to interpret each text in the way that they please. James Rosa鈥檚 geometric drawings show an appreciation and careful consideration of composition and are reminiscent of vintage TV sets, radios, and other simplified machinery. For Jesus Salas, lists of numbers layered over abstract paintings become an attempt to record and order his surrounding environment. Making his New York debut, Jamie Berube鈥檚 Towers of Colors series are reminiscent of DNA strands, and the lists and drawings on the reverse of each work show this ordering system applied in text. Linda Haskell transforms existing imagery into a frenzy of line and tone, as seen in her Horses series.