622 Warren Street
Hudson, NY. 12534

Tel.  518.828.1915 Fax. 518.828.3341

Hours:
11:00am to 5:00pm
Closed Tuesday and Wednesday


Lori Van Houten

Click on image for an enlargement and additional information.


Margins of Winter (Dapple), 2005

Mine Road No.1, 2009

Mine Road No.2, 2009

Mine Road No.3, 2009

Pasture's End No.8, 2009

Stained Silk (Delusional Flowers), 2004
Sold

Winter's Edge, 2009

Borderline (Brindled), 2007

Borderline (Hatch), 2007

Borderline (Markings), 2007

Borderline (Traces), 2007

Field Notes (Bittersweet), 2006

Field Notes (Final Harvest), 2006

Field Notes (Seedfall), 2006

Field Notes (Sweetbrier), 2006

Field Notes (Thornapple), 2006

Field Notes (White Nettle), 2006

Field Notes (Wild Hydrangea), 2006

Margins of Winter (Quicksilver), 2005

Stained Silk (Red Flurry), 2004

Stained Silk (Willow Moss), 2004

Stained Silk (Windfall), 2004

Stained Silk (Uncover, Unearth), 2004
 

Artist Statement

My current work consists of large photo-based works on paper. Each print incorporates nature-based photographs produced in camera, combined with selected found imagery to form each multi-layered piece. The work is produced by computer and consists of a complex layering and interacting of images and involves a continual back and forth process of erasing and adding to achieve the final whole.

Each piece begins with an underlying image which is generally formed from several related images photographed at the same site. The underlying image is chosen for it’s basic forms and color and often suggests the final feeling of the piece although often all three elements are obscured by the time the work is complete. The underlying photomontage is covered with a textile image that serves as both a concealing and revealing element in the process. These layers are in turn combined with layers of additional photographs, fragments of photographs, herbarium samples and other imagery all interacting to form the final piece.

The fabrics are selected for their depiction of botanical subjects and come from historical periods when this work flourished. Some of the series such as Stained Silks include fabrics of the 13th c. from the regions bordering the silk routes. Field Notes incorporates western lace imagery. The herbarium samples generally come from the same regions as the textiles and are often manipulated and used for the purposes of “drawing” on and in the composition. The selection of the various elements and images is both research and the structure on which each piece is built.

 




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Carrie Haddad Gallery   tel. 518.828.1915   fax. 518.828.3341