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"Fresh Young Talent, Old Rotting Fruit: Of Flesh and
Fruit in the White Gallery
By: Celina Monte
Issue date: 10/31/07 Section: Arts and Culture
As an artist, Carly Bodnar is sparkling. With her third
solo show in three months opening this week, Bodnar is receiving the
kind of professional attention some mid-career artists can only dream
of. One can only hope that the trend will continue after her graduation
from Portland State this spring.
For an undergraduate, Bodnar's work is surprisingly mature.
"It feels like it's really coming out of me," Bodnar said
of her painting and organic photography in a recent interview, "which
is weird because it's all happened really fast."
"Not that many art students have been applying [for a gallery
show] lately," said Emilie Gerber, coordinator of the Littman and
White Galleries, who said she is just as committed to showing student
work as she is to showing the work of professional artists. "I
don't know if they're afraid or if they're not ready to have a show."
"We do do a lot of rejections," Gerber continued, pointing
out that, "if you don't apply, you're never going to find out."
Finding out is exactly what Bodnar has been doing, often getting gallery
shows by responding to Craigslist ads. And, as of late, the answers
have all been yes.
"I live my life on Craigslist," said Bodnar, who met her
boyfriend through the personals, and is currently making a custom wedding
dress for a woman who offered the job in the barter section in exchange
for six hours of massage.
"One of my artistic goals is to get some shows that are not from
Craigslist."
Which isn't to say that Bodnar is fearless. She said it took several
months from when her photography instructor, Julia Grieve, suggested
that she submit to the White Gallery to when she finally sent in her
portfolio. Even then, it was only when she met up with a friend who
had been working for the student-run Littman and White Galleries that
she was finally convinced.
Bodnar's work resembles her working style, a tightly controlled reign
that stands precisely on the border between emotive physicality and
formal abstraction. A generally happy, even bubbly undergraduate, Bodnar
spoke directly about her work and life for several hours while sipping
coffee in a warm Southeast bar near her home last Saturday night, before
departing at 10 p.m. to do some late-night weekend panel-painting in
the Portland State studios.
Bodnar traced the roots of her current work to her class schedule last
fall, when she began taking Introduction to Sculpture, a class she had
been putting off since her freshman year, along with Photo I and Advanced
Painting.
While Bodnar has been painting since elementary school--when she attended
an after-school program that a friend's mom ran out of her garage--branching
out into photography and especially sculpture was completely new.
Bodnar claims installation art "scares the crap out of me,"
though, "I think I would like to [make installation art] if I could
get up the nerve."
Yet, what makes Bodnar's work so appealing is that it is multidisciplinary,
even while maintaining its flat wall-mounted guise.
In Graven Flesh, the series currently up at Vorpal Space in the Everett
Station Lofts, Bodnar is working formally toward translucency, color
clarity and well-ordered composition. She was successful, and the resulting
images are altogether intricately detailed, fantastic and grotesquely
alive.
The questionably biological images have singular names such as "Specimen,"
for a pair of hairy purple remnants atop pedestals in an uncomfortably
bright, yet dirty, landscape, and "Hypertrophia" (meaning
the enlargement or overgrowth of an organ or part due to an increase
in size of its constituent cells), to describe a vivid bodily wad falling
from darkness to light.
"A lot of people see balls," Bodnar said, describing her
images as a kind of inkblot test.
"It says more about you than it says about me," Bodnar went
on. "People see what they want to see."
As plastic, molded clay or cotton, the images in the paintings formulate
a carefully controlled environment, with aesthetic moodiness that is
conveyed in the shapes of Bodnar's brushstrokes as well as in the drips
and peaks she allows the paint to form.
For the White Gallery, Bodnar is showing a different but related body
of work: the Of Flesh and Fruit series. Starting with some aging fruit
leftover from one of her mother's visits to Eugene, which are usually
accompanied by a passenger seat's worth of food, Bodnar began photographing
up close, manipulating the fruit by tearing at it with her hands or
painting it with makeup and adding hair.
When Gerber, the coordinator of the galleries, was considering the
work, she was impressed because "it was different."
"It was organic as well as fake-looking," Gerber said. "I
haven't seen something like that in photographs."
Of Flesh and Fruit opens in the White Gallery, on the second floor
of Smith Memorial Student Union, on Thursday, Nov. 1, with a reception
from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. The show will last until Nov. 28.
A closing reception will be held for Graven Flesh Saturday evening,
Nov. 3, at Vorpal Space, on the corner of Northwest Flanders Street
and Broadway, in the Everett Station Lofts.
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Vorpal Space Gallery Presents: "Graven
Flesh" Paintings by Carly Bodnar
PORTLAND—In October, Vorpal Space will present
"Graven Flesh" a series of paintings by Carly Bodnar, a Portland
based artist. The public opening and reception will be on First Thursday,
October 4th, from 6pm-10pm. Normal gallery hours are by appointment.
Further gallery information is available on the gallery website: www.vorpalspace.com
"Graven Flesh" is an exploration of social and
economic pressures writ upon our very bodies. These pressures run the
spectrum from eating disorders to genetic engineering, and all attempt
to suborn our flesh into ever more extreme parodies of nature. The floating
abstracted gobbets in Ms. Bodnar's paintings tell a story of unintended
consequences and a society gone mad.
Ms. Bodnar is a Portland resident, and has shown her
paintings and photography regularly in Portland and Eugene, as well
as occasionally showing on the East Coast. Her show at Vorpal Space
will be her second solo show in the Portland area.