Measured Resistance
MAY-LING MARTINEZ’s new sculpture and works on paper serve as a metaphor for an innate desire to understand and control our surroundings under difficult circumstances. The works in Measured Resistance engage in the larger domain of relations—among ideas, objects, and the human heart—in order to gain a deeper insight into existential issues, such as the need for security and balance. Intrigued by human behavior and thought process, MARTINEZ investigates the paradoxical idea of maintaining control and stability under chaos. At the same time, she explores the idea that reason and logic, as prescribed by science and engineering, can function as a solace to an unstable reality framed by the infallibility of perception and personal subjectivity.
Employing combinations of pre-fabricated objects and her own hand-made pieces, MARTINEZ’s work fuses the personal and the social, the mundane and the mysterious. Their themes and messages are often communicated in subtle form, by turn endearing and seemingly innocuous or vulnerable and repressive—at times hinting at the macabre. Her earlier work—“triggers to evoke memory” as she calls them—which one critic compared to “unsettling dreams with a retro look”, has given way to increasingly sparse and technically-sophisticated engineered pieces. The innocence and nostalgia of the past, often filtered through archetypes of idealized 1950s suburban life, technical illustrations, and the artist’s own personal memories, and, now dramatically paired down, are tempered by the concreteness of logic and mechanical engineering.
Writing by Luis De Jesus and May-ling Martinez for the exhibition, titled Measured Resistance, on view from June 27 through August 1, 2009 at Luis De Jesus Gallery-Seminal Projects. www.seminalprojects.com.
Employing combinations of pre-fabricated objects and her own hand-made pieces, MARTINEZ’s work fuses the personal and the social, the mundane and the mysterious. Their themes and messages are often communicated in subtle form, by turn endearing and seemingly innocuous or vulnerable and repressive—at times hinting at the macabre. Her earlier work—“triggers to evoke memory” as she calls them—which one critic compared to “unsettling dreams with a retro look”, has given way to increasingly sparse and technically-sophisticated engineered pieces. The innocence and nostalgia of the past, often filtered through archetypes of idealized 1950s suburban life, technical illustrations, and the artist’s own personal memories, and, now dramatically paired down, are tempered by the concreteness of logic and mechanical engineering.
Writing by Luis De Jesus and May-ling Martinez for the exhibition, titled Measured Resistance, on view from June 27 through August 1, 2009 at Luis De Jesus Gallery-Seminal Projects. www.seminalprojects.com.
Sculptures/Machines:
Drawings:
I consider these conceptual drawings, based on descriptive illustrations, "How to books", schematics, survival guides and manuals.
Copyright 2012 May-ling Martinez