|
Holly
Morrison
Visual Artist
During the
eight years since she moved here to teach printmaking and drawing
at the Cleveland Institute of Art, Holly Morrison has come to play
an increasingly important role in representing the vitality of Northeast
Ohios
cultural life. In her impressive public installations, as well as
in her more private collages and drawings, Morrison, born in Nebraska,
and trained at the Kansas City Art Institute, as well as Cranbrook
Academy, has provided Clevelanders a range of both powerful and
subtle visual experiences creatively combining metaphor and symbol
with detail and fact.
Users of
the new Stokes wing of the Cleveland Public Library often have their
initial encounter with Morrisons
work when they visit the Northwest Tower, where her site-specific
mural, The Golden Game, floats, rebus-like, from the ceiling
onto the walls, shading from blue to purple through reds and yellows,
shimmering with gold and silver flake. Offering her own (very postmodern)
interpretation of medieval alchemical texts in the librarys
special collections, with an array of mystical emblems organized
in a cruciform chessboard pattern, Morrison has provided readers
with surroundings highly conducive to a stimulating research experience.
|

Morrisons
mural,The
Golden
Game, at
the
Cleveland Public Library
|
During
the successful run of Urban Evidence: Contemporary Artists
Reveal Cleveland, a three-venue exhibition held in the fall
of 1996, Holly Morrison had the opportunity to energize yet
another wall. This time, she detailed configurations of a certain
sector of the city into a thought-provoking grid displayed at
the Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art. Widely praised in
reviews of this important Cleveland bicentennial show, Morrisons
NowThen comprised a careful juxtaposition of black
and white photographs focusing on the unseen details of the
urban environment. After observing her surroundings over the
course of a calendar year, she carefully selected 128 views,
then arranged them provocatively, in rows four high and 30 across.
Asking viewers to focus more intensely on the mundane and the
familiar, Morrison actively encouraged Clevelanders to rethink
our accepted urban identity. |
Simultaneously,
by hanging poetic views of Lake Erie on an opposite wall, she invited
us to consider our locale from the more obvious (yet also often overlooked)
angle of the natural horizon.
As her work
has matured, we have had the opportunity to see Morrisons
distinct creative patterns develop. Frequently centering on the
resolution of opposites, she has striven to dissipate arbitrary
distinctions: between differing media, between realism and abstraction,
harmony and dissonance, external and internal, embodiment and intangibility.
Like the alchemists she admires, Holly Morrison effects physical
transformations which seem to radiate an aura of the spiritual.
text by
Ellen G. Landau
Chair,
1998 Visual Arts Jury
1991 Winner of the Cleveland Arts Prize for Literature
|