From ‘Studio Decisive Moments’

A Review by student Chrissy B. from the blog ‘Studio Decisive Moments’ of ” Tenterhooks” an exhibition by Karley Klopfenstein and Anja Marais at St. Mary’s School of Maryland’s Boyden Gallery.

“….The dual exhibition showcased the work of Anja Marais who is an artist from South Africa who works with sculpture and the theme of storytelling and life passages in her work. Although she currently resides and works in Florida, Marais has artwork and publications all over the country. As her biography states, “ Through an ancestral portal she examines the fragility of life by creating biosphere content that touches on themes of cyclical elements of fauna and flora, memories, genetics and life-death.” This is very true with Marais’ work that she presented in the exhibition, with sculptures of the human head and torso attached to strings and other fabric materials. One specific sculpture showed a man’s head upside down, attached at the neck by a tied rope hung off the ceiling. The sculpture is hand sewn and Marais explained how she sews on each small portion of fabric to make the surface of the sculpture actually resemble that of the human skin. This, as well as glass eyes bought from a taxidermist make the sculpture resemble the human forms of life and death; it’s on the edge of reality but also on the verge of unreal. When I spoke to Marais, she actually said that this was something she was trying to get across in her artwork. Behind this particular piece was a collage of the different pieces of numbered fabric, pasted onto a sheer cloth with hints of blue water-like shapes. When you stand back and look at the work, it looks like a person submerging themselves into the water; its abstraction and beauty really do contradict each other, but give it almost a sort of nostalgic feeling. …” ~ Chrissy B

By |2017-07-11T00:09:17-04:00November 25th, 2010|

Guide and Review for “Flow of Thoughts”

Edit: We were also mentioned in the Korean Herald.

Text by Juhee Youn, English Translation by Hyemin Son. On http://neolook.net/

패트리샤 토마와 아냐 마레이스의 전시 가이드 하기 ● “어디나 우리는 선으로 연결되어 있습니다. 그 선은 때로 눈에 보이기도 하고 보이지 않기도 합니다. 또한 그것이 전혀 다른 지점을 연결하는 선으로서 위치하게 될 때 지속적인 형태를 띠게 되며, 어떤 경계를 표시할 때는 정적인 형태를 띠게 됩니다. 뚜렷한 목적이 있는 선일수록 그 선의 모양은 단순화 되고 최대한 짧게 표시되며, 그 반대의 경우는 선도 시작과 끝점이 쉽사리 보이지 않을 정도로 복잡해지고 엉켜서 때론 만나기도 하고 겹쳐지기도 합니다.

여러분은 자연스러움에 대해 익히 듣고 있을 것 입니다. 그것이 지금 인간을 위한 최선의 선택이고 미래를 위한 완벽한 선택이라고 말들 합니다. 이렇게 자연스러움은 21세기 커다란 화두입니다. 뚜렷한 목적을 향해있는 단순화 된 선으로만 가득 차 있는 도시에, 자연으로부터 나온 듯한 유연한 선들을 더해줌으로써 도시 안에서 자연스러움을 만들어 가고 있습니다. 하지만 자연스러운 것이라는 건 철저히 자연과 동일해질 수 없다라는 사실을 아이러니 하게도 강하게 전제하는 것이 됩니다. 즉 그 자연스러워 보이는 유연한 선들은 자연스러워야 한다는 강박관념하에 선명해지며 시작점과 끝점이 눈에 들어오기 시작합니다.

여기 두 작가들은 목적이나 계획들로 인위적으로 다듬어지고 단순화 되어가는 서울을 자연스럽게 돌아다녔습니다. 그리고 정확한 목적이나 어떤 선입관 없이 이 도시를 찬찬히 관찰하고 기록하고 마주하게 되는 상황에 자연스럽게 반응했습니다. 그들이 서울을 이해해나가는 방식은 출발점과 도착점이 서로 모호하게 얽혀있는 선 같았습니다. 그러나 있는 그대로를 보겠다는 태도 자체가 인위적인 의도를 드러내는 것이기 때문에 이들의 존재는 눈에 들어오기 시작합니다. 또한 그들의 자연스러움과 우리들의 자연스러움이 결코 같지 않기에 그 존재는 더 확실히 인식되기 시작합니다. 마침내 그들이 자연스럽게 반응하여 풀어낸 서울은 전혀 우리가 경험해보지 못한 낯선 서울로 다가오게 됩니다. ■ 윤주희

A Guide for Anja Marais and Patricia Thoma Exhibition ● In our daily lives, we are connecting with lines like roads, networks and rivers. A line could be visible and also invisible. It can connect two different spots and appear as a continuous form or it can mark a boundary and can appear as a static form. A line with a certain purpose is often designed as being quintessential and simplified, or it can become complex. A big snarl-up to mix the beginning and the end, sometimes to meet and to overlap each other. ● As we familiar ourselves with the idea of getting ‘being natural’, it suggests one of the best alternatives for humanity and a perfect choice for our future. Currently, ‘being natural’ is the great agenda of the twenty-first century. In a city, full of straight simple lines performing certain functions,it transforms into becoming natural by adding various fluid lines copied from nature. Ironically, ‘being natural’ is strongly premised on the assumption that it cannot be identical with nature. The more we obsess in becoming natural the more fluid lines emerge and clarify. ● Anja Marais and Patricia Thoma are here to stroll around Seoul which is getting simplified and polished artificially upon objectives and city-plans. Without a clear purpose and any prejudice toward Seoul, they are observing slowly, documenting and responding to this city. It seems that their approaches to understand Seoul are similar to tangled lines to blur the distinction between their starts and ends. However, to observe the matter without a prejudice and a purpose is also an obvious intention. From that point of view, we could have a glimpse of their existences. Their naturalness is different from our understanding of naturalness so that we could see two artists’intention more precisely. Finally, Marais and Thoma’s natural responses to Seoul offer us unfamiliar Seoul that we have never experienced before. ■ YOUNJUHEE

Related posts:
“The Opposite of Nature is impossible”
“Flow of Thoughts”, A Two Person Exhibition in Seoul
Progress at residency:week 2
Progress at residency: week 1

By |2017-07-11T00:09:18-04:00June 29th, 2010|

The Woman Who Was Turned into a Tree by Irreversible Magazine

THE WOMAN WHO WAS TURNED INTO A TREE by Lynne Bentley-Kemp, PhD

For Irreversible Magazine

Anja Marais is an artist who is a passionate truth-teller, a shaman who leads us into darkness only to reveal the lightness of being one with our world.  Her search begins by finding comfort with duality and contradiction. She employs the adaptive strategies of a stranger in a strange land. The choices Marais makes are in direct relationship to her insight into form and function on a cellular level. It is no accident that paper is her medium – its protoplasmic structure and organic nature creates a credible foundation for internal worlds that skillfully articulate with external environments. Her intense engagement with her materials helps to weave the intricacies of art and science into the consciousness of the viewer – we are seduced by the artistry of her work. It is this kind of serious engagement with craft that is too often seen as superficial trickery. In Marais’ case this couldn’t be further from the truth.
Marais draws upon her South African heritage and engages folklore with highly charged intellectual statements. Marais is most interested in describing simultaneity through her examinations of contradiction and synchronicity. She carefully explores the juxtapositions of human and animal, male and female, life and death, the physical and the metaphysical and weaves a story that is all encompassing in its eloquence. Her connection to the cycles of nature always leads back to an obligation to integrate sensation and intellect – through this challenge, she reveals her poetic voice and consistently delivers a message that focuses on the primary themes of time, memory and the unity of knowledge.
Her work is life-affirming its resonance with spiritual preservation and renewal – her materials, her subjects all become part of a reconciliation story. This is a new story that is made up of mythologies that collapse under the scrutiny of Marais’ macro worldview and microscopic vision. She unpacks cultural symbols and repackages them into a form that allows us to see what has been happening all along – that hierarchies become illogical when confronted with open minds, power can evolve into empowerment and transformation just might lead to redemption.

Lynne Bentley-Kemp, PhD
Chair, Sculpture Key West
Instructor, Florida Atlantic University
Dept. of Visual Art and Art History

By |2017-07-11T00:09:18-04:00June 20th, 2010|
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