Geoff Lowe.Geoff Lowe's visits to Vietnam, in 1991 and 1992, are reflected in three groups of work: straightforward drawings and gouaches gouache (gwäsh): see watercolor painting. of Hanoi Hanoi - Towers of Hanoi, Halong Bay, and the Mekong Mekong (mā`kŏng, mē`–), Chinese Lancang, one of the great rivers of SE Asia, c.2,600 mi (4,180 km) long. From its marshy source (definitively identified in 1994) on the Rup-sa Pass in the highlands of Tibet, it rises as the Za Qu (Dza Chu) and flows generally S through Yunnan prov. in deep gorges and over rapids. River; the banners and posters he made to advertise his exhibition in Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City; and, finally, complex paintings that hybridize the experience of Vietnam. In these, he memorializes two types of cultural milieu mi·lieus or mi·lieux (-ly : those of an Edenic assembled world of friends and family; and the constructed world of nostalgia, which for Lowe exists as a series of memories of the '60s and '70s. Lowe's impressive paintings, A Constructed World I (Sergeant Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band), 1992, and A Constructed World II (Bay Gio), 1992, are tableaux of a staged world of friends, artists and, in the latter picture, his Vietnamese hosts. Both paintings pastiche pastiche (păstēsh`, pä–), work of art that combines themes and styles from various sources in such a way as to appear obviously derivative. Pastiches are frequently passed off as works by the artists from whom the motifs and figures were taken. the Sergeant Pepper cover. In the first painting, instead of rock stars, Lowe's children pose in fancy pirates' costumes; in place of '60s photomontage, we see a collection of self-portraits by Lowe's associates. Other images, such as the hilly, wooded landscape and a walking, waving camera are quotations from his earlier paintings. These reflect Lowe's desire to make cultural metaphors visible: the paradigmatic male subject is rendered as a comical camera/eye; the hyperreal is rendered by a straightforward landscape that is, however, a national park lovingly reconstructed over several decades from a 19th-century painting. ![]() ) 1. The totality of one's surroundings; an environment. 2. The social setting of a mental patient. Lowe took A Constructed World I to Vietnam, along with its replica, A Constructed World II, inviting participation from local artists. The landscape of Halong Bay and the local houses were painted by Vietnamese artists. Similarly, he worked with traditional lacquer lacquer, solution of film-forming materials, natural or synthetic, usually applied as an ornamental or protective coating. Quick-drying synthetic lacquers are used to coat automobiles, furniture, textiles, paper, and metalware. The lacquer formula may be varied to impart durability, hardness, gloss, or imperviousness to water. Nitrocellulose (pyroxylin) lacquers are the most widely employed. craftsmen near Hanoi, who recreated an older painting from a photograph in an exhibition catalogue. In the lacquer simulacra, How Happy are Those who Believe Seeing, 1992, pitch-black skies, shrines, and jungle replace Australian bush. The tools of representation--a hammer and camera--remind us that this is a painting, that artifice creates art, and that art is work. Lowe's insistence on images of measurement is testimony, to a desire to protect his experience against the enervating effects of cultural exhaustion. |
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