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Styrofoam sorcery

By GREG COOK  |  October 22, 2008

But it doesn’t achieve the how-did-she-do-that wonder of the pin and the toothpick cubes, or Haze (2005), her best piece here. The title is apt: it’s hard to see the thing, which seems to shift and flicker like vapor. It wasn’t until I got close that I was able to detect its material: thousands of translucent plastic drinking straws cut to different lengths and filling an entire wall. (Earlier incarnations were held in place by gravity, but here caulking at the back anchors the straws.) Donovan’s isolation of single materials limits her color palette. Much of her work features various tones of plastic — and it’s a bit unsettling to observe that as she builds it up in ever greater numbers, it goes from translucent or frosty white to buttery to oily brown.

As you walk past Haze (2005), as your eyes catch different straws, lumps and fissures appear, and the piece shimmers like dragon skin. You witness Donovan’s mix of hard-turned-soft, of solid-turned-vaporous, of gravity, fragility, mystery, sleight-of-hand, uncertainty, stillness. It is a strange and marvelous alchemy.

You can read Greg Cook's blog at gregcookland.com/journal.

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  Topics: Museum And Gallery , Institute of Contemporary Art, Institute of Contemporary Art, Martha Stewart,  More more >
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ARTICLES BY GREG COOK
Share this entry with Delicious
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    One of the questions in fine art is how to address the big issues of today, from our wars to global warming.
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    If you're looking for meaning in the overly sanitized myth that is our national Thanksgiving celebration, a good place to start is southeastern Massachusetts, where nearly 400 years ago that band of hungry, ill-prepared religious zealots tried to colonize the middle of nowhere at the start of winter.  
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    If you were going to recount the evolution of hippie guy fashion, you might say that what began with psychedelic ruffled shirts and corduroy pants in 1968 has in late middle age split into two streams: collarless white button-down shirts, usually buttoned right up to the neck and worn with a black vest, and Hawaiian shirts.
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    New York painter Eve Aschheim has said that she uses geometry in her abstractions "to 'think about' the intersection of nature and cityscape. My works might suggest the chaotic geometry of the city, the expectant stillness of air, the tenuous balance of a wire line against a building."
  •   CHANNEL SURFING  |  November 17, 2009
    In May 1978, Providence police raided the exhibition “Private Parts” at the Electron Movers loft on North Main Street to enforce a then-new state obscenity law.

 See all articles by: GREG COOK

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