Sunday, January 11, 2015

Contemporary Artifacts - works by Chris Meyer and Jenn Noel

Last Friday’s ARTScrawl led me to the Weyrich Gallery featuring Contemporary Artifacts with mixed media artist Chris Meyer and ceramics artist Jenn Noel. Gallery owner Valerie Tibbetts has created a show that combines Meyer’s modern photography, printing, traditional collage and assemblage techniques with Noel’s functional pottery, featuring earthy glazes and traditional symbols such as spirals. Both of their work gives the impression of being archaeological finds while still being recently made, fitting Weyrich's overall theme of "diverse works from dreams, folklore, myth and the earth”.










Jenn Noel grew up in Socorro, New Mexico and earned her BFA in graphic design with a minor in photography and marketing from Eastern New Mexico University. While working as a graphic designer, she had a creative outlet but felt something was missing. Her interest in pottery began when she returned to school at the University of New Mexico to pursue a nursing degree and by chance took a ceramic class on the Arita method of Japanese porcelain. This method continues to influence her art work even though she now works in stoneware. Noel is a ceramic artist who truly believes in art living in a functional space. She validates this by adding, “When you use handmade objects, it allows you to slow down and experience the beauty of the world.”

Chris Meyer is a fan of wabi-sabi - the “beauty of things imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete”. He admires the myriad details of natural and handmade objects. His pieces start as photographs of rocks, ruins, petroglyphs, and petrified wood found around the Four
Corners region of the Southwest. Meyer looks for shapes, patterns, and hidden meanings in those images, akin to the way an old-school Zuni carver studies a rock looking for an animal’s spirit to release. From there, he creates collages to emphasize those patterns, and then print his photos on top to unify these real and imaginary worlds. Meyer finishes by adding assemblage elements – including sticks, stones, beads, bones, feathers, fibers, and metals – to add dimension, both to the physical work as well as to its layers of meaning, with many of the items selected specifically to convey a story embodied in the final piece. 



In describing his unique process, Meyer says, “Rather than attempt to create a perfect print of my photos, I see the shapes they contain as a starting point. I study these images for patterns, then build collages out of various papers, symbols, and texts to emphasize the shapes, texture and mood of an individual photo.” Meyer has exhibited his one-of-kind art with many groups including Collage Artists of America, Los Angeles Experimental Artists, and The Society of Layerists in Multi-Media.


There will be a second reception for Contemporary Artifacts on Saturday, January 10th, from 1:00 to 3:00 p.m. at the Weyrich Gallery. At this reception, Chris Meyer will give an artist talk that will be videotaped for later posting on Facebook and YouTube. Contemporary Artifacts will hang through January 30th at Weyrich Gallery, 2935-D Louisiana Blvd. NE, Albuquerque, NM, (505) 883.7410, www.weyrichgallery.com.