"I make art that makes me question, that derives its power from being vulnerable to interpretation."
- April Gornik
Bower combines two of April Gorniks signature motifs: a sense of nascent mystery and dramatic tension, and an emphasis on using the physicality of a medium as a vehicle for emotional impact. Bowers cluster of slender trees stretch from a densely shadowed horizon to a sky that is almost entirely filled with a cloudlike mass of foliage. The arterial network of their trunks conveys an ambiguous sense of movement, implying both an upward growth and a rivulet-like descent. There is a weight, an unnamed presence in the cloudlike density of their upper portions which suggests a metaphysical realm, an ethereal unknown space. The skys brief swath of light acts as a moat, traversed by the trees as if by a series of bridges linking this shadowy realm with the corporeal firmness of the earth below. Meanwhile, the scale and presence of the tapestry enables the viewer to engage with Gorniks imagery on a somatic level. The mystery and quiet tension of the charcoal drawing upon which Bower is based permeate the works layered fibers to the point of saturation: the tapestry acts as a body, charged with the compelling animism of Gorniks composition. |
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