Opening night photos for I Am Nature exhibition in Los Angeles and writings about my Performance in Nature series. Next event is an artist’s talk 4.17.19 7-9pm
The Performance in Nature series explores human being’s relationship to nature, sexual stereotypes, class, dichotomy and paradox. It juxtaposes a reverence for the natural world and a recognition of its sentience, with the visual language of advertising, pop culture and the fashion world. With wry humor the images reflect the multifaceted implications that are a part of the capitalistic visual machinery, which through sexually charged iconography is simultaneously exploitative and reductive, liberating and empowering. These pieces contemplate the connection between the treatment of women and the degradation of our environment, and ultimately human beings oneness with the natural world. Monet works in front of and behind the camera in her long standing method of framing her real life events as performances which are documented with still images, and in her semi-autobiographical performance/video pieces. These images are shot in a town of northern California where Monet has returned throughout her life, after being raised in the Back to Nature subculture of the area in the 1970s.
-Monet Clark
The title for this show is a reference to a meeting between Jackson Pollock and Hans Hoffman.
In 1942 Lee Krasner invited her former teacher, Hans Hoffmann, to visit Pollock’s studio. After some time looking at Pollock’s paintings, Hoffman noticed that there were no still lifes or models. He then said to Pollock, “You do not work from nature. This is no good, you will repeat yourself. You work by heart, not from nature.” Pollock answered: “I am nature”.
This story represents the Dionysian vision that Pollock and his peers felt about their process of discovery. They believed that they were delving into the deepest mythic aspect of being. Their ethos was to liberate the creative forces that surge through consciousness and touch the creative spark that animates life.
Pollock did indeed believe that we are nature; that in our raw untethered state we breathe with the pulse of autumn rhythms, the cadence of the stars and tidal movements as they swell and swoon. A vision he ultimately realized in the epic canvases he painted in the 1950’s.
This exhibition is a look through this lens of what “I am nature” means to a group of contemporary artists working today. Some of the artists create work that focuses on the ever-expanding ideas that attempt to define the elusive contours of this living universe. I have asked other artists in this exhibition, whose work is not primarily about nature, to create work that reflects a response to this theme.
When Jackson Pollock said, “I am nature” in 1942, the knowledge of space exploration, dark matter, black holes, DNA and cloning were unknown or only speculated upon, at the outer margins of science. The world that we now live in, with nuclear weapons and the impact that civilization has had on the environment, are realities that were unknown at that time and have altered our understanding of ourselves and nature.
Indeed we are nature, and the creative act is fundamentally an expression of the deep currents and rhythmic pulse of life. With wit and alacrity, this show seeks to explore the philosophical implications of what these words mean to artists in the 21st century.
– Gary Brewer, curator
Productions shots from the making of NOW, A Video Art Ritual from 2018
The production of NOW involved two days shooting in my original homeland, the Santa Monica mountains in L.A., on a large sandstone rock overlooking the vast Pacific. Then we had one day of shooting at a recently burned forested area of Nevada City, CA my second homeland. Next each of my two characters had a day of shooting at my collaborator John Sanborn’s studio, in Emeryville in the East Bay. This production gave me had the largest crew I’d ever worked with (usually I’m a crew of 1, lol) with John Sanborn and his assistant, and our amazing production photographer and techie everything Roger Jones, and boom girl, plus my dear friend the talented make-up artist Wendy of Gypse Couture, and my assistant. The uber pro shots below are by Roger Jones, the rest by several of the team. We did good work. NOW, A Video Art Ritual the resultant 10 screen, large scale performance video installation and audience participatory ritual, debuted at SF Camerawork and wow’d, inspired, empowered, enlightened, entertained and cracked up audiences for its 2 its month run.
Highlights, “NOW, A Video Art Ritual”, SF ARTS
Photofairs San Francisco’s VIP tour, includes NOW, A Video Art Ritual, my collaboration with John Sanborn at SF Camerawork
For all VIP ticket holders for PhotofairsSF 2018, this Saturday evening February 26th, 2018 from 7-9pm, SF Camerawork will be hosting a private viewing session of the 10 screen performance video installation NOW, A Video Art Ritual. Come mingle with us artists John Sanborn and Monet Clark we’d love to talk with you about the work!
(poster images and post installation image by Roger Jones)