SAN JOSE, CA.- On the heels of its recent show, Next New:Green that featured the works of emerging Bay Area artists exploring issues related to conservation,the environment and global warming; the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) presents "Afterlife", a group exhibition of works created to breathe new life into re‐purposed materials andobjects. Guest curated by Kathryn Funk, "Afterlife" will be exhibited in the
ICAs Main Gallery and Cardinale Project Room from November 7, 2009 through January 23, 2010. The show includes sculpture, video, and multi‐media work from artists Claudia Borgna, Mark Fox‐Morgan, Elisabeth Higgins OConnor, Lisa Kokin, Charlotte Kruk, Robert Larson, Scott Oliver, Beverly Rayner, and Ann Weber.
The artists represented in "Afterlife" take advantage of cast‐offs from our contemporary lives. With a conscious eye to the materiality of the chosen discards, items from the street, junkyards and second‐hand stores are transformed into fresh, inspired creations that give rise to thoughtful consideration and interpretation.
Even before the green recycling revolution took hold, artists were reusing and re‐purposing found materials, says "Afterlife" curator Kathryn Funk. When an object has been discharged from its original purpose it still carries some association with its past. When that association is altered it takes on new meaning, explains Funk. Exploring new meanings and new lives of discarded and re‐used materials is the central focus of the artists works on view in "Afterlife".
London‐based artist Claudia Borgna has been collecting and using plastic bags as an inspired muse in her art for several years, carefully gathering and using them after each installation or performance in a different configuration. Borgnas work will be on view in "Afterlife and Night Moves" after dark video art programing presented in the ICAs front windows.
Mark Fox‐Morgan uses paper a tree by‐product cast as beams for his massive house‐like structure. The beguiling skeleton appears remarkably strong despite its extremely fragile nature, thus calling into question the nature and exploitation of its source. Elisabeth Higgins OConnor and Lisa Kokin find inspiration in materials scavenged from flea markets and thrift stores. Higgins OConnor uses discarded fabrics of all sorts and stitches together life‐sized anthropomorphic stuffed animal creatures. Kokin uses books and the book format; dissecting, reassembling and pulping them to express new ideas and her own personal, political and cultural views. Charlotte Kruk salvages and sews product wrappers side by side to create new textiles in the form of wearable art. Robert Larson gathers and dissects tossed cigarette packages and match books to make visually stunning constructed paintings of rich color patterns, hues and textures, with the dissected paper material.