Erik Benson

Erik Benson

ARTIST STATEMENT

I make paintings that are informed by fragments of urban landscape and culture that are found in the everyday. I am attracted to imagery that is ubiquitous within an urban architectonic setting in which elements of plasticity and temporality are depicted in a suspended state of transition. It is my intention that my depictions of these places and their inhabitants describe–through narrative and formal means–a special psycho-geography of place and placelessness that conveys the physical, psychological, and conceptual infrastructure of the urban landscape and its issues. As samplings of urban fragments and spaces, this work attempts to express something new about the neighborhoods and places we inhabit.

I am interested in making painting in an analog sense. I believe that painting is a visual language of thinking and seeing, and this is reflected in my process and imagery. I build my paintings by pouring acrylic paint onto sheets of glass. Once the shapes have solidified and acquired elasticity, they are peeled off and collaged into larger compositions: painting as collage. These collaged constructions create a mimetic relationship between the visual information depicted and the processes with which they are made. For me, these constructions relate to how the subjects are viewed and interpreted in the actual world.

The paintings for Urban Americana loosely relate to street culture and specifically dystopic environments of edge cities. As the title refers, they are depictions of mundane found objects collaged together to create a kind of totem to the Everyday, such as a plastic molded owl from the hardware store attached to a stump with a foam finger sticking on one of its dead limbs. Or a “knit bombed” tree highlighting the act of craft in nature. A lot of these subjects come from finding the objects discarded on the street and painting them in watercolor. This project started about a year and a half ago as research for “garbage” paintings. I saw things discarded on the street and they served as studies for forensic still lifes, implying other connotations than just garbage. In a sense, these temporary monuments summarize the shifting politics and issues of edge cities, so the paintings, too, are shifting and evolving.

– Erik Benson, 2015