Hanna Haska    

landescape

Hanna Haska
Jennifer Marman
Lynne Marsh


Front and Back Gallery

March 29 - May 4, 2001
Opening: Thursday, March 29, 8 pm
Lecture: Lynne Marsh, 7 pm

     

A pictorial landscape by definition is finite. Cropped, charted, and isolated from a larger spatial expanse, it proposes a singular viewpoint. The specificity of this isolated terrain determines it as a 'site' designated for a particular activity, structure, or situation. landescape brings together a group of artists who each represent or recreate simulated environments or landscapes as a situation or set of possibilities to the viewer. While some depict very specific, even didactic scenarios, others are more ambiguous situations for subjective experience by the artist or viewer, or forums for the imposition and projection of fantasy and desire.

These are not habitats per se; they are fictive. Nothing is indigenous to these places. Rather, they are mobilized as situations of limitless possibility, each developing its own kind of cultural and geographical 'ecosystem.' The viewer becomes actively engaged, or further still, becomes a catalyst within these environments. Perhaps through the participation and imaginative engagement of both artist and viewer these spaces have the potential of becoming fantastic playgrounds, spanning beyond the parameters of the depicted space, providing momentary escape.

In the Front Gallery, Hanna Haska's series of large Light Jet prints depict digitally rendered constructed environments. Rich with densely saturated colours and images verging on garish indulgence, Haska recreates proverbial Edens filled to capacity with the stuff of material and cultural consumption. Many of her source images, like aerial views of Toronto shot from a small airplane, or those of family gardens, are photographs Haska has taken herself. Other more iconic images appear to be clipped from magazines, brochures or catalogues, like floating suites of furniture, satellites, television sets, planets, money, messages in bottles, even tiny cases of Pringles potato chips. The density of these images is reminiscent of the fantastic panoramas of the Flemish masters Bosch and Brueghel with whom Haska shares the format of allegorical narrative characteristic. Like Bosch's Garden of Earthly Delights (c.1500), Haska presents a narrative triptych that traces a progression from harmony to discord, or more literally, from Heaven to Hell.

We are led from lost Paradisiac gardens complete with golden gates, flowing waterfalls, and lush foliage through a churning cosmos of ecological and cultural systems to a cityscape enclosed in a translucent orb, like a tangible biosphere which is being bent and peeled away. Haska articulates earnest millennial anxieties about the racing accumulation and speed of material culture and mass information. The urgency of Haska's vision of the tumult and confusion of our ethical and cultural climate translates in the extremity of her representations. As her environments develop, they fill to such a point of saturation that they become increasingly uninhabitable and unstable. And in Void (2001), her final image, a tiny jet-packed astronaut is seen making a swift get away, rocketing off into space as the earth collapses in on itself below.

In keeping with pictorial traditions of allegory, Haska makes no pretense to create believably illusory places. Iconic images and fragments of space have been sampled and resampled, cloned, resized, flipped, multiplied, and reappear countless times, insistently reasserting the 'constructedness' of the environments through the resulting glitches in representation. The use of recognizable Photoshop filters and tools leaves an indexical imprint of Haska's hand visible in her landscapes. As a result, the traces of 'cultural activity' which Haska graphically depicts are equally legible in the qualities and characteristics of the medium itself.

These images cannot be fully digested from one vantage-point. While stunning from a distance, they beg to be mined for details that can only be tasted at close inspection. The sheer size of them forces you to physically move and reposition yourself, to travel through the pictures as you would a giant map. Consequently, a direct interface is transcribed between the landscapes charted in Haska's images and the physical 'reality' of the viewer's movements in the gallery space.

Marman blue rock Also in the Front Gallery, clustered like curious pellets of sod, Jennifer Marman's Green Rocks (1999) lay about resting on or propped up against architectural features of the space. Each rock is carefully tailored with a covering of green Astroturf. With their seamed topographies and recognizable industrial materials, the objects are visibly handmade. Marman's Untitled (Blue Rock) (1999), a larger fiberglass boulder, is this time suited in luminous ultramarine blue turf. Like some uncanny island-in-the-round, the rock is at once reminiscent of a body of land and a body of water.

These natural references are built into, but skewed in Marman's rocks. Designed as a grass substitute, Astroturf simulates a natural material, but has since evolved its own system of industrial and domestic functionality. These uses are nullified by Marman's synthesis of simulated 'natural' textures and forms into confused hybridized objects which suggest both minerals and vegetables, while of course being neither. Like rolled-up capsules of concentrated 'landscape,' these objects hint at some new space suspended between our world and some other.

       
      Essay continues on page 2

 

Lynne Marsh's Venus...I see blue is part of WIDE, an exhibition of video, film and new media installations coordinated by the 14th annual Images Festival of Independent Film and Video, April 12-22. For more information: www.imagesfestival.com

    Biographies and Images:
                  Hanna Haska
                  Jennifer Marman
                  Lynne Marsh

       

Top Image: Hanna Haska
Linearity, 1999
painting, digital (Mac) photo print (Lightjet 5000)
48 x 96 inches
photo: courtesy of artist

Left Image: Jennifer Marman
Untitled (Blue Rock) 1999
mixed media
various sizes
photo: Corey Goodyear

     

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