Joyce Blunk: May, 1939 - January, 2025
ARTIST'S STATEMENT
Joyce Blunk
While painting and drawing feature prominently in all my work, I have long been especially interested in working with three-dimensional objects.
Early in my career I began removing items from still-life arrangements, altering them in various ways, and physically attaching them to my paintings.
That approach evolved to incorporating objects into mixed-media paintings or placing them in sculptural collages I display on shelves or in wooden boxes, most of which I have
designed and hand-built.
Much of my present work still derives from my continuing interest in the still-life genre.
One major theme repeated throughout is the abstract enshrining of objects that symbolize poignant human preoccupations and vivid life issues such as loss, melancholy, and the
irrevocable passage of time.
I arrange natural or manmade items in wooden boxes, on display platforms, and on paintings, in ways that experiment with space and exploit the symbolic meaning and
essence of the objects and their presentation.
Many of these assemblages and paintings invite a response of compassion or pathos.
I believe this emotional response results partly because the central objects are sequestered, often in a setting of serenity and beauty, and partly because of the
patina and surface buildup achieved by working layer upon layer of textures, paint, and markings.
This surface treatment suggests both the richness and the poignancy derived from a relentless state of deterioration and change that occurs over an extended period of time.
Throughout all the work, ordinary items are transformed by being presented in a formal and ceremonious way that alters the viewer's way of seeing them.
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