Like many print artists working today, Chris Papa is drawn to the - TopicsExpress



          

Like many print artists working today, Chris Papa is drawn to the challenge of making contemporary art in what is considered by many to be an anachronistic medium. Papa works primarily with woodcut for several reasons. It provides him with a way to combine the physicality of sculpture with the graphic qualities of drawing. The woodcut reveals in an explicit, visceral manner the process of carving, inking and printing that is used in its creation. And, it has an intrinsic affinity for abstraction that contrasts its use in representational artwork. This dynamic contrast, the intersection of and tension between abstract and representational imagery, is the primary source of material for the artist’s work. Papa exploits the absence of a clear boundary between these categories to develop imagery that is both familiar and unrecognizable. The imagery is based on naturally occurring forms, however, it is not derived from the direct observation and reproduction of nature. It is a synthetic version, a composite of real and imagined shapes and marks that evoke the natural world. An external referent may be implied, but without confirmation of any meaning outside of the composition itself. The sense of familiarity or near recognition of separate components or the composition as a whole provides an enterance to the work. The pictorial forms simoultaneously appear as landscape, still life and figurative works. Papa received his BFA from the University of Colorado in 1989, he is a member of Seattle Print Arts and Print Arts Northwest. This is his first solo exhibiton at Davidson Galleries.
Posted on: Sat, 27 Jul 2013 19:35:17 +0000

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