Mariapaola McGurk’s upcoming exhibition at Candice Berman Gallery is a yearning for human connecting after disruptions caused by Covid-19
By Edward Tsumele, CITYLIFE/ARTS Editor
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Often when we interact with people, for an extended period of time, such as at school, at college, on the sports field as a team and certainly at work, we never realize how much of that bond will be there long after we have gone our separate ways. And here I am not referring only to the emotional bond, but the bond of memory that tends to linger on long after people have gone their separate ways.
In her new exhibition, which opens at Candice Berman Gallery in Riverside Bryanston on Thursday, March 3, 2022,visual artist Mariapaola McGurk is on a journey of memorializing her experiences of people that she has worked with and was interconnected to through a shared space until 2020 when Covid hit and disrupted many people’s social and business interactions.
The exhibition is aptly titled Finding the Pattern in reference to the medium in which she practices, which is papercutting. She uises that practice as the filler os spaces when there is no human connection, and the result is beautiful pieces of work that can easily find space in one’s home. The works are aesthetically pleasing to look at.
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The artist does this by use of a medium that is quite unique, paper cut offs that she weaves together into intricate patterns that attempt in the final analysis to tell that complex story of interaction between people in their everyday lives, and what happens when that is disconnected..
“Initially the search for the pattern in my artworks was a technical response to the limitations of the medium – papercutting. Papercutting is a process of extraction;
there is nothing added to the paper but instead the imagery is made visible through the removal of the paper, in a similar way to a sculptor working in wood or stone. The limitation is that all elements of the imagery must be connected, or the pieces will fall out. This limitation led to using pattern as that connection. The patterns also serve as the strength of the paper – lessening the fragility of the work.
This began a thought process relating to our everyday routines, our patterns as people. Our choices. If the pattern holds us together – what patterns do we choose? Patterns, however, decoratively striking, are mundane and repetitive – not necessarily our focal point or even an area of interest.
The pattern is technically needed; it is not simply decorative but essential to the artwork.
During 2020 the rhythm of my life, and most people’s lives, was challenged and disrupted. My creative company had to close down and with it the loss of daily interactions with people working or visiting the workshop. Those faces are seen throughout this exhibition and are portraits of memory, of change, of disruption.
With that disruption has come a huge shift in my focal point and an acknowledgement of the patterns I need to find – the rhythms I need to create. It has also changed my focal point. The repetition, the connections, the threads that weave the story together – are so important, without them we have nothing.
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Finding the Pattern is about finding the strongest ways to stay connected, to make the bigger picture possible….to not fall apart,” she says in a note accompanying the exhibition.
CITYLIFE/ARTS had an interview with the artist about her new exhibition curated by Candice Berman, which features 42 works the artist has created in recent years.