KARWAN_AGUILUZ

 

AMABELLE AGUILUZ DAVID KARWAN

SHIRLEY WATTS_GUEST CURATOR

 

AMABELLE AGUILUZ Amabelle Aguiluz (b 1986) is a visual artist who combines traditional and unconventional textile techniques and found materials into her weavings, sculptures and site-specific installations. She lives and works in Los Angeles.

My current work, sea(center), is a reflection of the body, states of consciousness and the healing power of water.

I use my whole body as a vehicle to knit found materials, documenting passages of time and my daily experiences. Each meditative posture forms a line or loop connecting the body and breath to place.

The work is a metaphor for life and is a form of resilience, a hope to bring healing to personal and collective grief.

DAVID KARWAN (b. 1982) is a graphic designer, photographer, and writer who lives and works in Los Angeles.

Kodak Instant film, produced and expired from the late 1970s to the mid 1980s, has become a bit of an obsession of mine over the past five years. Each pack of ten exposures has proved to be its own ready-made darkroom and rapid collaborator.

This series, Restless Chroma, features assorted constructions whose manipulated executions yielded near monochromatic outcomes. Each cameraless construction, some made in a few days and others over a few weeks, emerged from evaluating, grouping, and arranging the often surprising developments contingent upon physical interventions like freezing, heating, or squeegeeing the film’s emulsion out of its pocket with a piece of hard plastic. Each unique pack of time-sensitive material developed and fixed distinctively based on the temperature during manipulation. Once framed, each completed work is not only a new formal curiosity, but an inventory of effects.

While experimenting with “dead stock” is nothing new in photography, Kodak Instant film, like PR-10, PR 144-10, and HS 144-10, was terminated as part of the historic Polaroid v. Eastman Kodak patent-infringement case, in which Federal District Judge Rya W. Zobel ordered Kodak to withdraw from the instant camera business by early 1986. Working with this specific film furthers my interests in serial form, the photograph as object, chance operations, spilling light, and faux realities.

This on-going exploration is not only a reminder of how reliant the world of photography is to mass-produce products, the free market, and planned obsolescence, but that photographs can be pushed past conventional form and photography has sculptural possibilities.

 
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SHIRLEY ALEXANDRA WATTS_GUEST CURATOR is a landscape contractor with over 25 years experience designing and building gardens in the SF Bay area. In 2012, she founded Natural Discourse, an ongoing series of symposia, publications and site-specific art installations that explores the connections between art, culture, science and site. Her extensive experience with curating, managing and installing public art exhibitions includes projects with the University of California Botanical Garden at Berkeley, Los Angeles County Arboretum and Botanic Garden, and Sagehen Creek Field Station. Natural Discourse has been awarded grants from Los Angeles County Arts Commission, the Pasadena Art Alliance, Center for Cultural Innovation and the National Endowment for the Arts.