There’s One thing Poisonous About Megan Bickel’s Landscapes


LEXINGTON, Kentucky — In between receiving her MFA and turning into an assistant professor of portray on the College of Louisville, Megan Bickel took an uncommon detour for a profession artist, incomes an MA in Digital Research in Language, Tradition and Historical past on the College of Chicago. 

I share this info as a result of I believe figuring out Bickel’s twin pursuits makes her work extra readable, if not absolutely knowable. Data, visible notion, and the disruption of each by new applied sciences are on the coronary heart of the artist’s present exhibition, Orgonon, at Institute 193. Collectively, her 12 latest work — all firmly ensconced in each the digital and the tactile — convey a vibrant and disquieting sense of what it feels wish to be alive proper now: to witness a flourishing of creativity amid warfare and environmental destruction and to sense an uneasiness with synthetic intelligence at the same time as we’ve come to rely upon it in our every day lives and interactions.

Bickel begins the works by digitally collaging her personal images, usually choosing textural imagery, resembling cloudscapes, grass, and timber, or sequined, mesh, and holographic materials. She reproduces the collages on canvas with an inkjet printer earlier than mounting them on hardboard; she then intervenes with oil and acrylic paints, typically in thick globs and different occasions with an virtually translucent lightness. Further supplies, resembling hydraulic cement or holographic cellophane, amplify the work’s physicality or additional confound the viewer’s visible notion.

Within the present’s titular work, a rough-edged triangle sits askew in a mattress of tall inexperienced grasses. The digital picture of a clouded sky fills the triangle, reworking it right into a portal to a different dimension, whereas a pixelated camouflage sample on the backside edge suggests an encroaching army presence — or, maybe, the potential for digital photographs to turn into corrupted into unreadable grids of colour.

I had assumed Bickel had created the phantasm utilizing Photoshop, however the triangular space is definitely a bit of reflective material that the artist had positioned within the grass after which photographed. The clouds weren’t digital manipulations in any respect, however relatively the sky mirrored within the material. (The camouflage sample appeared on the material’s reverse.) That I used to be so prepared to simply accept the picture as a “faux” felt unsettling to me.

Bickel’s painterly interventions in “Orgonon” are minimal — a line of inexperienced tracing an extended blade of grass, some curves across the perimeter. However she additionally paints on the perimeters of the panel, which signifies a need to attract the viewer again into the fabric realm, to remind us that that is, certainly, a bodily object.

A a lot bolder utility of paint options in “I write as a result of I can not paint” (2024), with its pronounced stripes of darkish brown, tan, and inexperienced, and thick ribbons of Pepto Bismol pink dancing throughout a pastoral inkjet background. Small sections of yellow seem at first to be paint, however may be material positioned within the discipline. The work, with its playful abstractions floating throughout a photographed panorama, conjures notions of augmented actuality.

Different works, nonetheless, resist such straightforward associations. “As soon as I noticed a warfare comedian and the weapons went budda budda budda and wham. My rifle was really extra like krang” (2024) gently evokes the ocean by way of sequined material that shimmers just like the scales of a fish, in addition to lots of of small, iridescent pink brushstrokes that appear to maneuver like a college within the ocean, and swish arcs of deep inexperienced paint. However a clean golden kind and daubs of electrical pink paint across the edges of the canvas forestall the work from turning into a mere oceanscape. Is the golden rock talisman or trash? Does the surprising pink characterize poisonous slime? 

Equally, in “Fishbrain, what do you consider, when your kitchen’s on fireplace” (2024), muted sequins glimmer inside an space that’s been masked off to resemble a Zen-like stack of rocks. Peaceable, besides that after sufficient time the aqueous layer of micaceous iron oxide begins to recall an oil spill slowly coating the ocean life with its slick, malevolent sheen.

In keeping with the gallery assertion, Bickel’s analysis “assesses how Google Imaginative and prescient API […] would affect the destiny of local weather reporting as a consequence of present labeling manufacturing design.” If a pc doesn’t acknowledge that a picture represents an impact of local weather change, then is it even taking place? What if our notion turns into so distorted that we not see the extent to which a digital hegemony is shaping our bodily world? Whereas Bickel’s analysis could try to reply the primary query, her artwork responds to the second with a mesmerizing and uneasy open-endedness.  

Megan Bickel: Orgonon continues at Institute 193 (193 North Limestone Road, Lexington, Kentucky) by way of July 27. The exhibition was organized by the gallery.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *