Wendy Kramer

Two Collages


 
 

Much of Wendy Kramer's recent work in collage is literally a reading-into the paths and synapses of verbal and visual "information." If it is increasingly the case that the world comes to be legible in the form of packaging, and if the interior structures of our various bundles of code are increasingly interchangeable — that is, dispensable — then one might see Kramer's work as an attempt to recreate an interior on the outside, by means of spatial and syntactical ripples, rips, and creases in the surface of cartons, envelopes, advertising pull-out sections, and redundant multiple wrappers. Postal instructions, candy boxes, and corporate logos are test tones, promising an imminent message which never arrives. Kramer's art practice takes up the implication of this disjunction, and takes these carrier signals as themselves the form of the world's constant arrivals, not a series of delays, missed connections, and static. Such work intends to change the channel — not in the sense of consumerist choice, but as transformation. This is at once a pragmatics, reading the only kind of messages one can finally afford, and an erotics, anxious and celebratory at the constant interchanges of surface and depth. Both of these modes find a common stance in their demand that the world be what it has been saying all along.
 



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Buffered Aspirin 
Untitled 
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