Overview
Transformer proudly presents its third exhibition BIG MIND, an exhibition of drawings, paintings and other visual communication by Matt Cutler, Taylor McKimens and Jay Stuckey.
Relaying a new awareness of contemporary narrative painting and drawing, Big Mind unites East and West Coast artists who convey realities drawn from cosmic, comic narrative. Working in distinct yet threaded styles, the artists contemplate human (and sometimes inhuman) challenges through themes of epic consciousness and filters of their own interpretation.
Matt Cutler was born in Arlington, VA, and graduated with a BFA in Painting and
Printmaking from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond. He spent five
years living, creating and showing art in Washington, DC. He has since moved to
Brooklyn, NY where he's obsessed with ping-pong, and has won many a good
match with his ace backhand “that cuts like a fucking chainsaw”. His current
paintings highlight the highly impersonal themes from the rigid world of science
exchanged in paint through his own personal observations.
Taylor McKimens grew up drawing cartoons in Winterhaven, California, a small
town on the border of Mexico. He received a BFA at Art Center in Pasadena,
California and began showing work at New Image Art in West Hollywood. He
now lives and works in New York. His current work pushes beyond what are
commonly held as the limitations of drawing, starting with drawing and often
ending up in the realm of sculpture and installation. Infusing issues of cold
impersonal abstraction with highly personal drawings of recognizable images
and feelings, he strives to simultaneously work with polar opposites such as
ugliness and beauty, bravado and cowardice, or dead seriousness and humor.
Jay Stuckey received his BA from Brown University and his MFA in painting from the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Growing up in Washington, DC, he now lives
and works in Los Angeles. Recent solo exhibitions include New Work at American
Intercontinental University, Los Angeles and Double Feature, Post Gallery, Los
Angeles (both in 2002), and It's A Mother, Aquarius Records, San Francisco (2000).
His work in the Big Mind series divines from one, or both, of two themes: “the
creation of an overwhelming and physically impossible mass; and a fascination
with epic narratives.” Jay is to be featured in the Fall Issue of Zing Magazine.