Virginia Poundstone
source: aldrichartorg
Virginia Poundstone’s practice spans photography, sculpture, video, and installation, and is exclusively focused on the history and botany of the flower and its socio-economic and cultural significance. Her exhibition at The Aldrich is dedicated to two important sources of inspiration: Giacomo Balla’s series of Futurist Flowers and traditional American flower-pattern quilts. Poundstone debuts a new outdoor sculpture, Quilt Square (Tulip) (2015), and an earthwork, Tulips (2014–15), on the Museum’s grounds; in an interior room, artworks and objects investigate the visual representation of flowers through abstraction in art and design. The outdoor sculpture, a geometric flower in stone and glass, is based on the geometry of a traditional quilt pattern. Placed in the interior courtyard, where it is visible from within the Museum’s Leir Atrium, it is seen for a fleeting period in relation to a field of colorful tulips (more than three thousand bulbs were planted in eight dynamic hues) that form a resplendent garden across the sloping grassy embankment. Inside the Museum’s expansive Project Space and Balcony Gallery, visitors encounter a new glass sculpture by Poundstone, as well as a monumental wall print of Rainbow Rose (2013), alongside seminal inspirational works by artists that span generations and art historical movements. Adjacent to these influential works, on loan from institutions around the country, she also includes objects from her own collection.
Virginia Poundstone was born in 1977 in Great Lakes, Illinois, and lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
Generous support for Virginia Poundstone: Flower Mutations has been provided by The Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Inc. Thanks to COLORBLENDS™ Wholesale Flower Bulbs for their donation of flower bulbs. Additional support for exhibitions has been provided by the SAHA Association and The Coby Foundation.
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source: miamirailorg
In BOG-MIA, New York-based sculptor Virginia Poundstone cross-pollinates sculpture, video installation, and photography to explore the transformation of flowers from living things to commodities within the global system of trade. The installation is rich in matter and material, incorporating vinyl, granite, aluminum, and chemically altered roses into her work. At the core of Poundstone’s installation is an inherently complicated species, one that yields a complex world beyond its natural state.
The acronyms in the title represent the airports in Bogota and Miami, two points on a vast global network for angiosperms, and, likewise, the arrangement of BOG-MIA inside Locust Projects supports this larger narrative. The first video installation is a recording of a Colombian worker picking flowers from a row of plants in a greenhouse, and a long vinyl screen printed with a photograph of dead, discarded flowers hangs above the corridor towards the second gallery. On the first wall of the second gallery, large video projections show the packaging plants where most commercial flowers are processed. The second gallery is filled with sculptures more in tune with her larger body of work: small, geometric, aluminum sculptures with real, artificially preserved roses. The small part aluminum, granite, and floral arrangements rest on stacks of the cardboard boxes the commercial flowers are packed in.
The process of collecting, selecting, shipping, and arranging flowers for sale is a thriving international industry. The history of use-value and subsequent exchange value of flowers is not unlike the long discourse that has grown around art. Poundstone’s work certainly taps into this economic history, as well as the flower’s place in art history as a common symbol of vanitas. The theme of vanitas, enlisted in the arts as a symbol to reaffirm our notion of what is earthly and ephemeral, is challenged by Poundstone’s roses. The roses in her sculptures have undergone a technique in the flower industry of rapid dehydration, thus creating an eternalized, semi-artificial flower. The transformation of the value of a commodity, illustrated through the transformation of the flower in industry (Tulip Mania being one popular example), is all the more challenging visually.
The case of an object becoming unhinged from its intrinsic value (the title of Poundstone’s solo debut was Illiquid), or divorced from its natural state, as is the case with every flower that is bought and sold, is a difficult story to weave through an abstract form. Yet Poundstone makes her project abundantly clear through video, readymade boxes, and some sculptural arrangements. Every piece in her installation contains its own narrative, and brings to mind other facets of the industry that may be at play, though not physically present in Poundstone’s installation (most often for the better). Perhaps the problems of today’s market, where what is bought and sold is continuously more abstracted by its governing forces, is best combatted when artists make their efforts all the more transparent.