The
latest installation in the Woolworth windows
The Weekly Volcano, Aug. 30, 2012
The
Woolworth windows on Broadway and on Commerce are filled with cloud-themed art
beginning with the northern most windows and an installation called
“Fabrication” by Janet Marcavage. The walls and the floor are filled with
boldly striped patterns in cherry red and plum and blue and white and a
wonderfully soft lavender. Printed mostly on paper to emulate the look of
folded and billowing cloth, the patterned cloud shapes that hang from the
ceiling and cling to the windows set up a challenging interplay between real
and fake materials. Some of them are made from fabric and others by cut and
folded paper, and it is almost impossible to tell which is which.
“Spaceworks
gives the opportunity for experimentation, so I took the opportunity to play
further with illusion,” Marcavage says.
She
explains: “The paper elements in ‘Fabrication’
are all printed by hand, including the large red-violet striped paper (meant to
look like bunched fabric) on the rear wall in the right window. All of the
smaller paper elements are printed and cut out by hand. I included some
real fabric in an attempt to combine illusion with the real thing. (The work)
celebrates the topography of textile pattern imprinted upon daily life. The
work is inspired by striped patterns used on a multitude of items from
tablecloths and towels to button-down shirts for men and women. I enjoy the way
that lines can render fabric’s mutable form, shifting at the folds of everyday
life. This installation also stems from my long-term investigation of
printmaking’s visual language, particularly the use of line hatching in prints
dating back several hundred years.”
"Fabrication" by Janet Marcavage |
The
Marcavage installation is playful and delightful.
Heading
toward 11th Street, the clouds settle to the ground like billows of
fog in Jennifer Renee Adams’ installation, “Equus Cirrus.” Cottony clouds hug
the floor in this set of windows, and moving through the ground layer of fog is
a herd of paper horses. The horses are colored in tones of off-white and tan,
and rest on thin legs. Each of the horses stands approximately a foot in
height. Rosemary Ponnekanti writing in The News Tribune compared them to
sculptural horses by Deborah Butterfield. That’s a stretch for me. Butterfield’s
horses are majestic and monumental; these are more like delicate little toys.
Adams extends the cloud theme with photographs of clouds taped to the windows.
Unfortunately, they add nothing and are a distraction.
The
next set of windows, on the corner at 11th, was a work in progress
by Kenji Stoll when I visited but should be completed by the time this review hits
the streets.
The
Commerce Street windows feature an installation by Laura Foster called
“Strawcloud/Parlour.” The main part of this is a massive swirl of straw woven
into rope and meandering through space, twisting and overlapping and circling
back on itself, filling the space in front of a wall of early American-style
wallpaper. In the next window is a snow-capped mountain sculpted from what
appears to be plaster and straw on a bed created from a window shutter on
wheels. It does not add anything significant to the installation, which would
be much better if the meandering straw rope continued into that space.
[Woolworth
Windows] Broadway at 11th and Commerce, through December
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