Spotlight artist Rob Davis
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The details in Davis’ works reveal a predilection for 1970s and 1980s domestic and everyday objects – the era of the artist’s childhood – a pastel blue telephone, a pair of woven lawn chairs, a picnic table laid with a gingham cloth or a crocheted quilt, crumpled on a bed. Davis is drawn these things, he says, for their spark of “a memory of people and places from my past.” Working from photographs, Davis makes a study in watercolour before beginning to work in oil, suffusing other ambiental references to the lines of Joan Didion, Rick Bragg and S.A. Crosby to name a few. “If you read the essay ” On Keeping A Notebook” in Didion’s ” Slouching Towards Bethlehem” – that essay is essentially my artist statement,” Davis adds.
Stopping short of nostalgia, these eerie, spectral scenes slowly reveal themselves – prompting the viewer to consider the fraught relationship between image, reproduction and memory. We are enthralled.
About the champion
Angel Otero was born in 1981 in Santurce, Puerto Rico, where he resided until moving to Chicago in 2004. He currently splits his time between Puerto Rico and New York. In 2009, Otero was included in the exhibition ‘Constellations’ at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, shortly after receiving his MFA at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. With a practice that spans painting, collage, and sculpture, Otero experiments with innovative techniques to create abstract works about memory, identity, and his lived experiences. Otero is best known for his Oil Skin works, where he applies oil paint onto glass and peels them off to create layers that he reassembles into new images. His works are included in the collections of the DePaul Art Museum in Chicago, Istanbul Modern, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, among other institutions.