
Monique Meloche is pleased to announce her first solo
show of new paintings by Scott Stack
Scott Stack
Night Vision
March 17 - April 22, 2006
opening reception for the artist Friday March 17th 6-9pm
Scott Stack's meticulously rendered paintings are both process
and content driven. His monochrome paintings are made line-by-line as
if seeing the world through night vision goggles. We are all too familiar
(thanks CNN) with televised night vision imagery, and Stack considers
carefully the images he chooses. Pictures of airplanes and the crash site
of Lady Di may not seem out of place in their implied destruction. However,
when the lens is turned to cool Bauhaus architecture, the Buckingham Fountain,
and even a snowman one begins to question this reality.
"I wanted to create a painting that used a technology that referenced
covert seeing. A form that made seeing the image illicit and I wanted
to make a painting with only one color, not in the minimalist or color
field tradition but a painting that defaulted to its construction in spite
of being painted. I have continued to keep my work experimental by allowing
new processes into my vocabulary and painting what interests me. This
process exists in the world by virtue of information designed, produced
and disseminated through different media, as a painter I am interested
in both the recognizable quality of the technology and the possibility
of constructing an image that can only exist as a painting."
Scott Stack 2006
Scott Stack was born in 1952 and lives in Oak Park, Illinois and received
his painting degree from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design in
1976. He has had solo exhibitions at White Columns NY, Chicago Cultural
Center, and Thomas Barry Fine Arts in Minneapolis. Group exhibitions include
the Drawing Center NY, Minneapolis Institute of Art, Hyde Park Art Center
Chicago, and most recently at the Gahlberg Gallery. Stack has been the
recipient an Illinois State Arts Board Grant, Ragdale Artist Residency,
McNight Foundation Fellowship, and Jerome Foundation Fellowship. This
is his first solo show since 1997.
back to top
|
|

Airplane, 2005
oil on canvas
52 x 100 inches
|