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‘Unintended Consequences’ Yields Delightful Results

The Arts Fund exhibit features varied media, from drawing to sculpture to video.

‘Unintended Consequences’ Yields Delightful Results

One artist uses blurry burned marks on plywood. Another produces tiny organic images shining off aluminum. Paper sculptures dangling from the ceiling are the work of another artist. What connects these images? At first, the relationship between these disparate art objects eludes. But upon careful inspection, themes from the show Unintended Consequences emerge and expand. All the works by artists Ro Snell, Tom Pazderka, Alice Wang, Vanesa Gingold and George Sanders use lines, edges, and minimalist gestures and a restrained palette of colors to create a singular composition. Paper, often handmade abaca, is used by many of the artists, and simple, overlapping layers and grids are prominent. The results are compelling and elusive works that provide more questions than answers and beg for further viewing.

Curator Charles Donelan, this paper's executive arts editor, brought together these works and artists because of their accidental techniques, the way their “unintended consequences” can yield surprising and delightful results. This idea is reminiscent of the automatic techniques employed by the Dadaists to free art-making from its tyrannical tie to the ego. In other words, kick intention out of the way, and let free-form, play, and the unconscious imagination create delightful works of spontaneity. While these conceptual ideas may introduce another layer of understanding onto the work, no critical-theory education is necessary to enjoy these delightful and intriguing visual dances.

The most remarkable difference between the artists in Unintended Consequences is their choice of media, from drawing to sculpture to video. The most direct works are by Snell, whose three works on paper are reminiscent of accidental organic marks found in nature, like scratchings left by the feet of forgotten birds on loose dirt. Repetitive and distinct, the marks allude to a larger idea without giving it away easily. “Chair Study” is an especially beautiful example of Snell’s process, with its delicate layered paper and smudged charcoal lines. In less capable hands, the work could read as a study for something more grand, but Snell creates a sophisticated, oblong choreographed message of lines that could be a secret message in a simple, new written language.