Antone Konst
Looking at anything, if we consider it Art, allows us to tune our seeing…a painting is an
instrument, a kind of calibrator for thought and perception. We don’t expect it to be meaningful immediately like everything else (an iPhone means 1,000 things quickly), we expect a formal experience to confuse our consideration of content, usually, which is what allows it to be ‘more’ or ‘other’ than it ‘is’.
In building this kind of instrument, I often rely on culturally clichéd tropes very personal to me, like a glyphic tablet, the sun, ferns, a rooster. A ubiquitous motif of the french, yankees, country folk, lovers of kitch, etc.; a Rooster is also infinite.
Growing up on a farm I’ve observed poultry closely and had relationships with them, seen our roosters peck and rape hens, forage for ticks, run around headless.
I start with a linguistic sign of [rooster, rogue text, moons, whatever] as my drawing, and my knowledge that it exceeds knowing as my color, material, process, texture, scale. Then I rub the two together like sticks, looking for friction.
The problem with cliché is that it’s meaning is powerless. Another problem is that meaning, in relation to objects, is not singular – it’s infinite and malleable. In that way, clichés exclude those perspectives (non-dominant) which
find different meanings than the prescribed one.
I’ve always had a distrust of something that it supposed to ‘mean something’. It diminishes the agency of the producer and the consumer.
In my practice, I take that supposition of meaning in figurative form and empty it, or,
from another perspective, overload it with aesthetic and material significance.
It’s not aggressive, it’s generous. I sincerely believe in the Warholian principle that if something is formal enough, if it has no clear
symbolic value anymore, it suddenly can become a new sight for meaningful signification, an instrument anyone can play and which, though specifically tuned, can express
powerfully and with nuance.
An instrument like that can be a tool for perceptual agency. That’s what I try to make.
Looking at anything, if we consider it Art, allows us to tune our seeing…a painting is an
instrument, a kind of calibrator for thought and perception. We don’t expect it to be meaningful immediately like everything else (an iPhone means 1,000 things quickly), we expect a formal experience to confuse our consideration of content, usually, which is what allows it to be ‘more’ or ‘other’ than it ‘is’.
In building this kind of instrument, I often rely on culturally clichéd tropes very personal to me, like a glyphic tablet, the sun, ferns, a rooster. A ubiquitous motif of the french, yankees, country folk, lovers of kitch, etc.; a Rooster is also infinite.
Growing up on a farm I’ve observed poultry closely and had relationships with them, seen our roosters peck and rape hens, forage for ticks, run around headless.
I start with a linguistic sign of [rooster, rogue text, moons, whatever] as my drawing, and my knowledge that it exceeds knowing as my color, material, process, texture, scale. Then I rub the two together like sticks, looking for friction.
The problem with cliché is that it’s meaning is powerless. Another problem is that meaning, in relation to objects, is not singular – it’s infinite and malleable. In that way, clichés exclude those perspectives (non-dominant) which
find different meanings than the prescribed one.
I’ve always had a distrust of something that it supposed to ‘mean something’. It diminishes the agency of the producer and the consumer.
In my practice, I take that supposition of meaning in figurative form and empty it, or,
from another perspective, overload it with aesthetic and material significance.
It’s not aggressive, it’s generous. I sincerely believe in the Warholian principle that if something is formal enough, if it has no clear
symbolic value anymore, it suddenly can become a new sight for meaningful signification, an instrument anyone can play and which, though specifically tuned, can express
powerfully and with nuance.
An instrument like that can be a tool for perceptual agency. That’s what I try to make.
Install Shot ‘Second Nature’ solo at Radical Abacus
March 2017
Polystyrene tree sculptures (‘basic trees’), naturally oxidized copper ‘ferns’, two small slabs, (René), two large slabs made on site, four black wood ‘Moons’ on the high wall
Monkey
36x24”, 2015-17
Oil, Wax, Pigment, on stretched
linen
Rooster
78x48”, 2017
Oil, acrylic, wax, and pigment on stretched canvas
Rooster
78x48”, 2017
Oil, acrylic, wax, and pigment on stretched canvas
detail ‘Icarus & Balla’
‘Icarus & Balla’
78x48”, 2017
Hand-cast plastic, pigment (fresco), plaster, Structolite, wire, panel
‘What to Do about that Moon’
46x38”,, 2017
Hand-cast plastic,Cardboard, Flashe, ink, clay, pigment, Papier-maché, Structolite, Aquaresin, panel
untitled (grass)
36x24”, 2017 Hand-cast plastic, cardboard, oil, pigment, clay, Aquaresin, panel
untitled (sunset)
36x24”, 2017
Hand-cast plastic, cardboard, oil, pigment, wood, Aquaresin, panel
untitled
36x24”, 2016
Hand-cast plastic, pigment, Quickcrete, panel
untitled (arches)
36x24”, 2017
Hand-cast plastic, clay,
nail-polish enamel, oil, wax,
pigment, charcoal, Aquaresin,
panel
Witches (Goya)’
18x14”, 2017
Charcoal and gauche on Aquaresin,
Structolite, papier-maché, panel
B-Ball/Apollo
18x14”, 2017 Oil, pigment, on stretched canvas
‘Goat’
36x24”
2017
Oil, wax, pigment, on
stretched canvas
‘Night Rider’
36x24”, 2016-17
Oil, acrylic, pigment, on stretched
canvas
‘Mizaru 3’
36x24”, 2016
Oil, pigment, on stretched linen
two ‘Slabs’
18x14” each, 2017
Hand-cast plastic, cardboard, oil, pigment, Aquaresin, panel.
in ‘Second Nature’
'Door’
28x78”, 2017
Hand-cut Birch ply, LED strips, paint.
Installed in ‘Second Nature’ with LED lights on back, as a door to a tall, narrow, room on wheels
Two ‘Slabs (for Second Nature)’ made on site in Santa Fe
2017, 24x72” each.
Hand-cast plastic, painted cardboard, handmade abacus, Structolite, wire, and found objects on panel. in ‘Second Nature’
Install Shot ‘Second Nature’ solo at Radical Abacus
March 2017
Polystyrene tree sculptures (‘basic trees’), naturally oxidized copper ‘ferns’, two small slabs, (René), two large slabs made on site, four black wood ‘Moons’ on the high wall
‘René’
36x24”, 2016
Oil, pigment, on stretched linen. Installed in ‘Second Nature’
Install Shot of ‘Second Nature’ solo show at Radical Abacus (gallery), Santa Fe, NM
March 2017
Polystyrene tree sculptures (‘basic trees’), naturally oxidized copper ‘ferns’, two slabs, painting (René)