Location: United States
Catherine Forster’s work induces viewers to slow down and spend time with each piece. Her interests lie in the inconsistencies and contradictions of every day life, banal moments that add up to something else. Forster’s trajectory as an artist began with careers in microbiology and business, each experience presented a pathway to her current practice. Observation and authenticity are the bedrock of her work. As a microbiologist her preferred medium was a microscope; today it is a camera and a paintbrush. Forster’s fascination with the world beneath the microscope transformed to the extraordinary arena played out beyond the lens. She is forever fascinated by the capacity of the “third eye” to capture what is missed or denied.
Catherine Forster is an artist, and independent curator based in the Chicago area. She received an M.F.A from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her artwork has been shown at the Grand Rapids Art Museum, Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum Chicago, Merwin Gallery Illinois Wesleyan University, Freewaves, City of Louisville Colorado Sculpture Garden, Carnegie Art Museum, South Bend Regional Art Museum, Flint Institute of Art, Orange County Contemporary Art Center, Exit Art (NY), Hyde Park Art Center Chicago, and the Contemporary Art Centre in Vilnius, Lithuania, to name a few. Films by Forster have been screened at the Sao Paul International Short Film Festival, East LA Intl film Festival, Chicago REEL short film Festival, the Other Venice film Festival, CA, Echotrope New Media Arts Festival (Omaha), Simultan Media Arts Festival (Romania), Echo Park Film Center (LA), Magmart Film Festival Casoria International Contemporary Art Museum (Italy), Directors Lounge (Berlin), and San Diego International Women Film Festival. Forster is also the founder and director of a non-profit nomadic new media art space, the LiveBox Gallery.
“They call me theirs” creates an experience intended to question the distinctions we make between the natural and mediated world. The genesis of this project goes back three years to a trekking trip in Peru. It took me a good three days to “un-plug”, but once I adjusted, an awareness of my surroundings surprised me. There was a presentness that now I can only occasionally attain. I’ve come to question the authenticity of my experience. What was truly mine? What had actually been framed by National Geographic and travel videos?
Authentic observation and participation are core to the project. Upon my return, I started documenting the seasonal changes around the perimeter of my home. I began to search for areas with less human influence, including local nature preserves and subsequently, the heartlands of Illinois and Wisconsin.
The installation reverses the experience of the outdoors by neatly packaging the four seasons in a “box set” that plays on a video monitor inside a handcrafted hardwood box, suggesting that our efforts to purify our experience with nature have actually taken us farther away from it. A “hanging garden” composed of large-scale ink jet prints on aluminum sign panels surrounds the box. The prints were sourced from video stills, then painted, and digitized, creating a luscious though synthetic environment. Two different cacophonous soundtracks play from both Box Set and outside the gallery, highlighting the tension between the realities of the two environments.
The title of the work is taken from a line in the poem “Hamatreya” by Ralph Waldo Emerson, which questions man’s desire to claim ownership of the land that is inherently owned by nature. In the poem, the Earth responds, “How am I theirs, / If they cannot hold me, / But I hold them?”
“By the Dripping Tree” is a multi-media installation including sculpture, video, sound, and inkjet prints mounted on aluminum. The project is an exploration of water and our relationship with the magical and complex substance. Water is the only substance we use for both healing and torture. We are mostly of water as is the earth, and we naively believe we control it until tragedy tells us otherwise. The installation includes large-scale images that are devised from painting and digital manipulation. These structural paintings are created in collage format allowing for site-specific installations.
The aluminum panels represent our romanticized union with water; the videos show her other side. “Swallow”, looped video with sound, explores the sheer power of water and our deployment of water to over power others.
Nature Signs includes 16 inkjet prints mounted on aluminum and installed on a cast aluminum directional traffic signpost. The piece was created for the City of Louisville Colorado's downtown sculpture garden. The work plays with the words "nature signs" and the format "directional signs", suggesting direction and information. The piece, however, provides neither, and mirrors our own confusion regarding nature, how to protect it, and what trade offs to make.
Now for the Painter
4 video loops, 2008/9
Late Autumn Afternoon Drift, 5:00 loop, 2008
At Anchor Near Shore, Spring Morning, 2:27 min loop, 2009
Sunset Sail on the Summer Solstice, 11:25 min loop, 2009
Dawn Outing Early Summer, 4:42 min loop, 2009
The digital seascapes of Now for the Painter are a tribute to Turner’s last seascapes. Ion Warrell, curator for the Tate Modern, described Turner’s later work as
"pared back” paintings… almost pure evocations of light and mood.
The project title is from R.J.W. Turner’s piece Now for the Painter, (Rope) Passengers Going on Board (Pas-de-Calais), 1827. The reference to a painter was Turner’s homage to the Dutch painter Aelbert Cuyp. I have been intrigued both by Turner’s skill with the brush, and by his interest in technology. I couldn’t help but contemplate his likely interest in digital media if he was practicing today. My admiration for Turner’s paintings, a passion for kayaking, and the beauty of a near by lake, were the inspiration for the video seascapes.