Brian Bixby
Brian Bixby is a contemporary American artist. His practice spans a broad range of media including sculpture, photography, neon, video, drawing, printmaking, and sound design.
Overview
Bixby makes installations, photographs and mixed media artworks. With the use of appropriated materials which are borrowed from a day-to-day context he uses traditional media and software to create exotic, psychedelic artworks of enormous range and complexity. Imagine the paint brush severed from cliché and all of its physical limitations, shaping a bold new visual language. His hyper-color and luminant compositions are anything but sterile computer experiments. They resemble sensitive, telescopic renderings of otherworldly life or natural atmospheric occurrences, an inherent naturalism permeating each piece. Bixby's installation works address space, context, and site.
His installations do not always reference recognizable forms. The results are deconstructed to the extent that meaning is shifted and possible interpretation becomes multifaceted. By applying abstraction, he presents everyday objects as well as references to texts, painting and architecture. Categories are subtly reversed. He creates situations in which everyday objects are altered or detached from their natural function. By applying specific combinations and certain manipulations, different functions and/or contexts are created. By using popular themes such as sexuality, family structure and violence, he touches various overlapping themes and strategies. Several reoccurring subject matters can be recognized, such as the relation with popular culture and media, working with repetition, provocation and the investigation of the process of expectations.
In 2006 Bixby received a Professional Development Grant from Creative Capital, New York, New York, USA. In 2012 Bixby worked with writer Marc Berdet on his Walter Benjamin project which included photos of the Mall of America.[1] This work was first exhibited at KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin. The same year Bixby created an installation in a house in Weimar, Germany that literally modified the architecture of the house. This project, Archeology, Excavation, and What Remains is documented on the Bauhaus University website.[2]
Works from Bixby have screened internationally at venues such as the Cannes Film Festival / International Critic’s Week, the Austin Museum of Digital Art, the Santa Fe Art Institute, and the Center for Contemporary Arts, Santa Fe. Bixby's works are included in private collections in the United States and Europe.
See also
Notes
- ↑ "Anthropologischer & aleatorischer Materialismus", KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin
- ↑ Archeology, Excavation, and What Remains
References
- Creton, Laurent (2014). Théoréme 21 Persistances Benjaminiennes. Presses Sorbonne Nouvelle. ISBN 978-2-87854-645-3.
- Lund, Cornelia and Holger (2009). VIDOS. fluctuating images.
- Isolated. Funkstörung. Triple Media. Die Gestalten Verlag (dgv). 2004. ISBN 3-89955-107-9.
- Domino Effect. XLR8R Magazine. 2004.
External links
- Official website
- Saatchi Art
- Vimeo
- ArtConnect Berlin (Germany)
- Currents' New Media Festival (USA)