Community Corner
Two Heads Are Better Than One | Exhibit UConn Stamford Art Gallery 8/19/13 - 10/1/13
The exhibit ranges from the intricately finished large canvases back to the irreverent “sketch” paintings and collages where their ideas are born. It features all manner of hybrid materials such as woven plastic grass seed bags, millinery ribbons and flattened, rusty bottle caps. It includes art works that typically start with one object or idea and then evolve in all directions and sometimes back upon themselves.
The sketch pieces are hung in the gallery where the viewer can watch as the ideas start to take shape. These starter pieces gain one level more of elaboration in the nearly wall-sized works on canvas where the artists go back and forth adding weird tidbits until the upset is complete. Like a dog with its huge pink tongue hanging down or a wonky line suggesting a tree. Here the collaborative nature of their working is most apparent. It is as if Nagle and Peterson’s paintings talk to each other: sometimes reaching out and sometimes holding back - either way they are friends. A song, a whisper, a secret, a giggle can be heard.
In all the various types of work exhibited, the often mundane familiarity of the object is “tweaked” by the artists painterly interventions, resulting in a world where time is stopped and a story is unfolding. These “not-quite-right” forms are much more exciting than the logical or photo version would be. You will wonder if you are inside or out, flying or falling, right side up or upside down. Like a bad disco song from the 1970s, these works stick in your head (whether you want them there or not) and some may haunt your quiet moments for a long time to come!
While the overall mood of the show is fun, these artists always manage to rein in the insanity and conceptually push things just far enough. There are no extraneous elements in the works, everything is as it should be!