John McQueen: Farouche
November 9 - December 17, 2006
                              Reception: Thursday, November 9th, 6:30 - 7:30 pm
Gallery Talk: Thursday, November 16th, 3:00 pm
Closed for holiday: November 22-26

Installation Image - Schick Art Gallery, 2006, sticks, string, plastic
 John McQueen is internationally known for his sculptural work, which primarily uses
                                 carefully tied sticks and other natural materials to form three-dimensional constructions
                                 or wall images. Some contain elements of poetic wordplay including palindromes, rebuses,
                                 and anagrams. McQueen's conceptually driven and often thought-provoking or humorous
                                 work stems from that of a basket maker. He has influenced the fine craft scene and
                                 broken its boundaries for more than 30 years. His work has been exhibited in several
                                 of the country's most prestigious museums and galleries, including the Renwick Gallery
                                 in Washington, D.C. (1992); and the Racine Art Museum, Racine, WI (2004). His works
                                 are in the collections of the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, Smithsonian Institution,
                                 New York, NY; the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA; the American Craft
                                 Museum, New York, NY; and the Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA, among others. "A basket
                                 is egocentric and imprisoning; it holds tenaciously to its limits. It has its own
                                 organization and regulates its definition closely. By insisting on being a basket,
                                 it keeps itself confined. Let other objects try for art. A basket is isolated, unique,
                                 separate from all but itself. Such defenses are tightly held. Uncertainty, movement,
                                 fear of being spread out is guarded against. The open object, the object of art, leads
                                 to a larger reality. The basket must reject this even when inside, it secretly entertains
                                 it. These secrets lead to hero worship and flights of fantasy. A basket must be careful.
                                 In such a state, it could become raveled."