‘Parable of Gravity’ | Alumni Casey Curran
Parable of Gravity Closes April 17
Cornish alumni Casey Curran’s exhibit “Parable of Gravity” is currently featured at MadArt Gallery in Seattle. The exhibit, which opened on Feb. 11, is still available for in-person visits through April 17.
Casey Curran received his BFA in Art (painting and sculpture) from Cornish in 2006. In “Parable of Gravity,” Curran has constructed tall wooden towers with thousands of half-inch strips of fiberboard arranged in a grid-like structure. Resting upon these structures, which embody a city skyline, rests a field of white flowers operated by a motorized lever system that makes the petals open and close and move left and right. These moving kinetic sculptures have caught the attention of the Seattle art community for their detailed, otherworldly quality.
MadArt Gallery is open Monday through Saturday by appointment. Masks are required and groups are limited to 15 people. Schedule a visit through the gallery website.
Parable of Gravity from casey curran on Vimeo.
From the MadArt Gallery website (text provided by the artist):
“Parable of Gravity,” an exhibition by Seattle-based artist Casey Curran, envelops viewers in an otherworldly kinetic landscape that appears to emerge from a series of crumbling scaffolds. As viewers enter into the installation they become fully immersed in an expanse of blossoming flora and an alien symphony that playfully bounces around the room. The chirping mechanical elements taken together deliver the viewer into the soundscape of a rainforest never seen but still inhabited with its varied insects, croaking frogs, shifting vines, and falling water. Through “Parable of Gravity,” Curran provides us with an alternative “natural” world. What you encounter is an environment in transition, simultaneously undergoing a cycle of growth and collapse. This fabricated ecosystem alludes to the fine balance of our world’s natural systems and our impact as humans on their well-being.
As you enter the studio, wooden support structures rise to eight feet tall. Moving inward, they congruently descend to rest under a monumental aluminum centerpiece modeled after 951 Gaspra, the first asteroid ever captured in detail. Each deteriorating structure hosts its own kinetic garden that is hand-constructed and assembled from laser-cut polyester drawing paper. The buoyancy of the material creates a life-life shudder in the mechanized sculptures that resembles stop-motion photography of a botanical bloom. This fastidiously constructed world is minimal in form and color, which further showcases its intricate brilliance. The aluminum asteroid—titled “Anchor of Janus” after the Roman god of passageways, transitions, beginnings, and endings—incorporates a rose window motif inspired by Gothic cathedrals and churches. This mythological, architectural, and astronomical convergence considers not only the scientific and spiritual aspects of our connection to the natural world, but also our cultural legacy and the ways in which past technological advancements continue to impact our lives and experiences today. Further, the reference to Janus recognizes the dual nature of human progress, with all of the positive and negative implications it carries.
It is prophetic that conversations for this exhibition began well before the COVID-19 pandemic and the sociopolitical upheaval and environmental catastrophes of the last year. Amidst these mounting events, the conceptual explorations of “Parable of Gravity” feel more relevant now than ever. It is undeniable that the unforeseen costs of rapid technological innovation, growing human populations, and our impact on the planet have pushed us to the edge of our sustained survival, looking toward a future that seems to crumble all around us. At this moment, we have a chance to save what we haven’t lost and leave our legacy for the generations that follow. Curran uses his installation to present us with an opportunity to evaluate, or rather reevaluate, our current and future relationship to one another and the world around us.”
Casey Curran has completed several large-scale public works in partnership with Skanska Architects, MadArt, Facebook, Oculus Rift, and Security Properties. In 2010 and 2013, Curran was awarded the NY Sculpture Space residency twice, and has received multiple awards in artistic merit since. In 2008, Curran become a key collaborator in the internationally recognized performance art group Saint Genet developing large-scale interactive sets, which have been exhibited at The Guggenheim Museum in NY, The Kunsthalle Museum in Krems, Austria, Luminato Festival in Toronto, Canada, and Frye Art Museum in Seattle. Curran is currently developing a series of works which explore our psychological relationship with nature.