David Eichholtz

Apr 6, 20173 min

JOHN VOKOUN - horizons / structures

Left: Structure of Earth, 2017, Oil on panel, 40" x 30"
 

 
Right: Structure of a Sunset I, 2017, Oil on panel, 40" x 30"


 

 
Copyright © John Vokoun
 
Click here to go to the artwork


 
JOHN VOKOUN
 

 

 
horizons / structures
 

 

 
April 7 through May 6, 2017
 

 
Opening reception: Friday, April 7, 5:00 – 7:00 PM
 

 

 
Paintings and Works On Paper From the 1960s and 70s
 

 


 

 

John Vokoun
 

 
Distant Mesa Sunset, 2017
 

 
Laser-cut oil paint on panel
 

 
36" x 24"
 

 

 
Copyright © John Vokoun
 
Click here to go to the artwork


 

 

John Vokoun
 

 
Wave Dissipation, 2017
 

 
Laser-cut acrylic on panel
 

 
30" x 24"
 

 

 
Copyright © John Vokoun
 
Click here to go to the artwork


 

John Vokoun
 

 
Earth Meets Sky, 2017
 

 
Laser-cut acrylic on panel
 

 
36" x 24"
 

 

 
Copyright © John Vokoun
 
Click here to go to the artwork


 

John Vokoun
 

 
NM Sky Structure, 2017
 

 
Acrylic on canvas over panel
 

 
24" x 18"
 

 

 
Copyright © John Vokoun
 
Click here to go to the artwork


 

 

John Vokoun
 

 
Data Horizon, 2017
 

 
Acrylic on laser-cut panel
 

 
36" x 48"
 

 

 
Copyright © John Vokoun

Click here to go to the exhibition


 

 

Left:La Fajada Earth & Sky, 2016, Acrylic on canvas over panel, 24" x 20"
 

 
Right: Heat Wave, 2017, Acrylic on laser-cut panel, 36 x 24 "
 

 

 
Copyright © John Vokoun
 

 

About horizons / structures:
 

 

 
Vokoun’s presentation, and debut with the gallery, represents a collection of new mixed media paintings created in response to the artist’s month-long residency in 2016 at Chaco Canyon in northern New Mexico, part of the National Parks Arts Foundation (NPAF) residency program in association with Chaco Culture National Historical Park of the National Park Service. This series of paintings was inspired by Vokoun’s reflection on the architecture, mark making, and symbolism of ancient Chacoan culture in contrast to our contemporary, technology-driven lives. The ground of many of the paintings is comprised of horizontal bands of color transitioning from ivories and blues at the top to fiery pinks, reds and oranges in the center that finally transition to earth tones at the bottom. These bands reference the reductive landscape and hues observed at sunrise and sunset in Chaco Canyon. Vokoun then laser cuts into the bands of pigment his computer data-driven digital imagery that layers a new geometric vocabulary on top.
 

 

 
Vokoun designs on the computer, playing with corrupted data, and then he paints on canvases that are often laser-cut to line precision. “The horizons I see in this work are the New Mexico vistas I’ve been living with for a long time,” he says. “At Chaco I was influenced by the way the Earth comes up and meets the sky. It seems their whole structure and civilization was built that way, reflecting geography and topography, like those buildings were meant to reach the sky.”
 

 

 
With a background in color field painting, Vokoun uses digital tools to explore the effects of the Information Age on contemporary culture. Influenced by the ideas of Carl Jung and mathematicians Henri Poincaré and Benoit Mandlebrot, he seeks universal patterns between systems. He believes shared modes of communication, symbols, gestures, and geometries can help us understand our evolution in a data saturated–world.
 

 

 
“Over the years working with corrupted computer data and elements of technology, I’ve thought a lot about the structures that make up our lives,” says Vokoun. This new series, horizons / structures, is part of Vokoun’s continued work reinterpreting data and its significance in our lives, as if translating line by line from one language to another abstract one. “When I was at Chaco, I thought about ancient cultures, their rituals and structures, and I thought about how our lives are constructed now,” he says. Vokoun’s works communicate by decomposing information to its basic units: data point, pixel, byte, and language—hinting at a source and rebuilding this into simple forms.
 

 
About John Vokoun:
 

 

 
A child of the personal computer era, John Vokoun has been fascinated with the computer as an art medium since he attended programming camp at age 9. From his first green and black CRT drawings on an Apple II to his present-day interaction with a variety of computerized machines, the computer’s influence on his work is only matched by the color field paintings of Albers, Itten, Kelly, and Rothko. With computer data and geometry, he seeks to channel the chaos of the Information Age into simple forms. Founder of Fire Dragon Color, a fine art printing company that has helped produce numerous award-winning books, Vokoun resides in Santa Fe, New Mexico. His work has recently been exhibited at the New Mexico Museum of Art.


 

 

 
Images: Copyright © John Vokoun. Courtesy David Richard Gallery, Santa Fe.

#JohnVokoun #ChacoCultureNationalHistoricalPark #NationalParksArtsFoundation #DavidRichardGallery #DigitalArt #DigitalData

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