Please join us for an Artists’ Reception, 5-7:00 p.m., Friday, February 27.
The Recital of Flesh: Transcending Time and Transmutation
Jenni Lombardi: Sculpture
Ian Minich: Wet-plate Collodion Tin-type Photographs
Mateo Rueda: Digital Art
Jenni Lombardi began as a painter, but now fully embraces clay and ceramics as her primary medium. She is fascinated by how humans are connected to animals, specifically through primal instinct and genetics. Jenni explores mutation and genetic engineering as a metaphor to demonstrate how easily connected and interchangeable humans and animals are, whether instinctually or genetically. Working with a malleable material such as clay, Jenni satisfies that part of human nature within herself, indulging in her curiosity and need to control.
Ian Minich explores the wet plate collodion process, which results in photographs made directly on aluminum or glass. Minich tries to surpass traditional portraiture and takes tintypes to a level rarely explored with the process, by creating images with more narrative qualities that mesh the modern era with the past.
Mateo Rueda works with schematics in the form of Bitácora, a journal that is related to the observations explorers would make about their journeys, where he merges the schematics with a set of animal sketches. In a taxonomic manner the work is exposed in different compositions, each piece talks about a set of species or subspecies of the animal kingdom.
Friday February 27 – Friday, March 20, 2015
First Friday Art Walk Event 6–10:00 p.m. March 6
http://sec.missouristate.edu