| When: | Jul 28, 2008 - Aug 1, 2008 |
| Artist(s): | Janet Chan |
| Additional Information: | Opening Hours: Monday 28 July 5-7 pm Opening. - Tuesday 29 July 10-4 - Wednesday 30 July 10-4 - Thursday 31 July 10-4 - Friday 1 August 10-2 |
Mounting Evidence: Traces of things to come
MFA Graduation Exhibition
Janet Chan
Drawing on popular culture’s fascination with forensic science, the artist plays with
physical evidence and literally generates mountains out of molehills. In manipulating proofs of
where things have been, she creates a fantasy of how things can become when taken out of context.
Focusing on the legal system as a symbol of the superiority of Western civilisation, the project
explores the ‘majesty’ of justice as it is manifested in the everyday administration of criminal
cases, where the prosecution builds its argument out of the fragments of evidence collected,
analysed and presented as a coherent story of actions and intentions.
Mountains are evocative symbols for the justice system. Lofty mountains depicted in Chinese
painting are, like Western justice, fascinating, awe-inspiring and spiritual realms that are beyond
the reach of most ordinary people. Mountains are often sacred places where believers pay
pilgrimage to seek health and longevity and where scholars and intellectuals seek self-improvement
and enlightenment.
If drawing is a way of making marks, this project turns the act of drawing upside down. Just
like the forensic scientist, the artist makes visible the traces created by objects by ‘dusting’
objects with powder and ‘lifting’ the traces on sticky tapes. These traces are then converted into
digital images using a computer scanner. In the same way that a prosecutor puts together a criminal
case, the artist builds cases from the evidence that has been made visible. Instead of making a
direct mark, the artist ‘paints’ the image using the palettes of physical traces as pigments. The
works combine both realist and surrealist techniques in a way that transgresses the processes and
conventions of traditional Chinese painting while at the same time appropriates its presentation
format.