Karen Cleveland

May 8, 2009
Mixed media/ collage on paper

Mixed media/ collage on paper

 

My process involves traveling to remote woods in North Georgia and opening myself to connecting to place; to the plants, animals, soil, rocks and leaves. I open my senses to receive the distinct fecund scents, the rush of wind through the cells in my skin, the call of birds and tremble of wings, the chorus of leaves and the bare earth under my feet. I set the intention of feeling and sensing the silent conversation between things and insert my own body and being into the dialogue. I can feel the rhythms and cycles of nature and how my body innately understands and matches its own breathing to the breath of the landscape. What can feel like thick impenetrable boundaries between inner-self and outer world begin to soften as self and environment bleed into one another. My body knows and remembers the earth. I employ different techniques to facilitate the connection: I press my chest against the soil to feel the heartbeat of the earth; paste leaves and sticks on my skin to feel the flesh of the world; and sometimes use pigment applied to my own body to mimic the bark of a tree. I am interested in the unfolding relationship between self and nature.

When I return to my urban-based studio, I attempt to recreate my experience in the woods. I use man-made materials such as felt tip markers, stickers, metallic paint, processed wood and neon color, as well as organic materials such as collected sticks, sand, soil, grass, bark and organic inks to explore the distance between and intersection of manufactured landscape and organic environments. At times, I reinsert my own body in the piece to further highlight the distance between urban and remote spaces. Through a process of deep surrender I use my body and energy to reengage the sense of connection I felt while in the organic world within an artificial environment.

3 Responses to “Karen Cleveland”
  1. Hi Karen,

    Thanks for posting. I’d like to learn more about how you incorporate the body in your pieces. Do you have any images of that work?

    Best,

    Jillian

  2. Hi Jillian,

    Thanks for your question. I have posted two images that depict how I incorporate the body in my work. Untitled (Rabun, Georgia) is an image of my body in the woods in Rabun, Georgia. The image depicts my practice of merging the body with the landscape, blurring the boundaries between nature and self. In the second image posted, Woods (Rabun, Georgia), detail, inserting body: 2.24.2009, is an attempt to recreate my experience of the woods in my studio by painting my body into the drawing itself.

    Last week, I installed the drawing in the woods to examine the similarities and differences between the direct organic environment and the mediated studio drawing, Woods (Rabun, Georgia). The next step is to incorporate the body.

    I hope this answers your question and let me know if you have any others or would like to see more images of either experience.

    Thanks again,

    Karen

  3. Hi Karen.

    I am a painting student at MICA.

    The concept of your work (connecting body to space) is very intriguing to me. I am studying a similar meaning in my work, currently. I document myself in a space and later remember that existence when my body is no longer present.

    Do you have a website I could visit to view more of your work/ ideas?

    Feel free to email me!

    Thanks,
    Alder

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