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Diana Cooper

Posted by Fabrik | April 18, 2009

Diana Cooper - Mechanical Cloud 2004-05 [plastic, photo, paper, foam core, acetate, vinyl, felt, neopreme foam, Velcro, map pins]

“Sometimes I feel as though I am making flowcharts for an imaginary world.”

My mind is like a filter constantly translating the world around me. Everything catches my eye: bright orange traffic cones meandering between the street and the sidewalk; an enormous building sheathed in black mesh from top to bottom; duct tape adhering a handwritten sign to a newly polished subway tiled wall. These are all urban works in progress, part of the transitory, the ephemeral, and the makeshift. These are the environments we inhabit everyday.

Diana Cooper - Orange Alert: USA 2005 [Acrylic, neoprene, acetate, felt, paper, coniugated plastic, map pins]

The act of mediating different worlds and creating unexpected juxtapositions is important to me. I want to transform materials and insinuate them into unlikely contexts. I want to create the sense that they don’t quite belong but at the same time that they do. Often I like to make something be what it shouldn’t be: scotch tape holds up a felt construction, plastic and pipe cleaners frame a heap of pom poms or a delicate felt-tip marker doodle covers an enormous canvas.

Diana Cooper - The Emerger: The Whitney Museum of Art at Altria, 2005 - Ongoing [Acrylic, ink, acetate, felt, paper, foam core, map pins]

I want the work to provoke questions: how are limits determined (inside vs. outside)? How are values assigned (back vs. front)? What determines what a painting is? My own work would be impossible if I did not question the traditional categories of painting, drawing and sculpture.

Diana Cooper - Museum of Contemporary Art, Cleveland, All Our Wandering, 2007 [wood, vynil, pigment print, ink, acrylic, colored pencil, ball point pen, velcro, foam rubber, and felt]

I am also interested in how you can start with a logical system and through sheer repetition and excess create something that unravels and stops making sense. In my work, systems overlap, compete and contradict one another. I want to expose the proximity of order to chaos and show how these two realms bump up against one another. Digital, biological and medical systems are our life support systems but they can fail us too. In their complexity they become unstable and sometimes quite fragile. Fragility is important to me because it underscores our own vulnerability. Like the makeshift improvisations on existing systems my work is fragile and grows organically. It depicts elaborate networks that suggest mysterious functions and unnamable machines.

http://fabrikproject.com.mx/diana_cooper_T.jpg

http://fabrikproject.com.mx/diana_cooper_T2.jpg

http://fabrikproject.com.mx/diana_cooper_T3.jpg

http://fabrikproject.com.mx/diana_cooper_T4.jpg

http://fabrikproject.com.mx/diana_cooper_T5.jpg

Diana Cooper - Swarm, 2003-2007 [comugated plastic, paper, ink, acrylic, felt, foam core, photos, veltro and map pins, dimension variable]

When experiencing my work I want the viewer to become aware of their own body, their own frailty and strength. I also want them to become sensitive to their desire to touch the work. At times the act of viewing itself becomes physically awkward or like a strange dance.

Diana Cooper - Hidden Tracks Sabotage the Random 2001-2002 [Vinyl, foam core, acetate, poms poms and paper on wall and floor]

The viewer needs to walk between things, stand on their tiptoes or bend down in order to see the work fully. I want the viewing experience to be physical, visual and conceptual all at once. I want the work to be both vital and vulnerable, like an ice cream cake in the sun.

www.dianacooper.net

3 Comments

  1. April 18, 2009 @ 8:39 am

    [...] “Sometimes I feel as though I am making flowcharts for an imaginary world.” [...]

  2. April 18, 2009 @ 10:31 am

    [...] Via: Fabrik Project [...]

  3. April 21, 2009 @ 8:27 am

    [...] Although hard to categorize, Diana Cooper’s work is an abstract way of constructing wonderfully engaging and interesting art works that provoke new emotions. A Rome Prize winner, Cooper combines drawing, painting, sculpture and installation to come up with these handmade visual hybrids that stun you at a first glance. With unlikely contexts and common materials such as foam core, felt, corrugated plastic sheeting, numbered map pins, acetate, Velcro, neoprene and pom poms, Cooper’s work gathers our daily environments and puts them together in unexpected juxtapositions. The Mechanical Cloud, the Orange Alert, the Emerger or the Swarm, it is the unnamable that makes us crave for a touch. [via Fabrik-Projekt] [...]

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