Page 9 - Art First: Christopher Cook: a chance encounter on the way down
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or a rope bridge that hangs above it. The valley begins to resemble a quarry, a place from
                     which building material has been extracted. The lines cross each other with no obvious
                     spatial logic you can discern, and lead uncertainly beyond the space defined by one-


                     point perspec tive. The illogicality is not blatant: we are presented here with a settled

                     land scape, familiar, ancient and ordinary, but one which contemporary perspective
                     cannot simply resolve. I began by saying that this is close to pastoral, but it is also imme -
                     di ately contemporary in its envisioning of how one place is necessarily and uncertainly

                     connected with others. It embodies a duality: a contained and indeed sheltered land -  [ ]
                     scape that is ambiguously connected to spaces sensed as outside it. In this way, each
                     new encounter extends into a process of picturing the shared future of the planet, rather
                     than looking back at its past−though it is a vital part of the artist’s tact and thought -

                     ful ness that the associations spread out from the image, and are not the result of an
                     imposed programme.


                     An obvious partner to it is waterstair, which movingly and memorably makes some kind

                     of representation of a landscape that is being irrigated. It is difficult to interpret how
                     these straight lines fit the assumed contours of the land, or with what we know about
                     how water behaves. The contrast of blurring and sharpness in the marks throws in other
                     levels of uncertainty. However, the illogicality is, again, not the final point. There is a hope -

                     fulness in the constructive effort here that needs to be acknowledged, alongside the
                     visual contradictions. Rod Mengham has described the painter Laura Owens as denying
                     the landscape tradition of ‘natura naturata, nature recast by man’s desires: a California
                     of the mind’ and ‘preferring the possibilities inherent in the concept of natura naturans,

                     the concept of a nature still unfinished and developing in a way that is unpredictable and




                     waterstair, 	   , graphite and oil on paper,    x 

 cm
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