Join us at Themes+Projects for the opening night of Echoes by Joan Wulf.
Artist Statement
Wulf focuses on relationships between trees—and by extension between trees and people—in her series Echoes. The body of work charts a sort of dance between tree and human, where the artist aims not to depict, but rather to record.
The pieces are deeply corporeal, both in subject matter and method. After choosing her subjects carefully from her surroundings—be that in the city of Los Angeles or woods of Northern California—Wulf wraps each tree tightly in canvas, and, armed with wood she has charred, rubs the bark to map the imprint. The result is a smokey figure—a recording not merely of the tree, but a moment to moment mapping of Wulf’s physical engagement with the trunk.
While the series is an ode to trees, it is also a warning to humans. The strong figures Wulf honors appear smokey, almost ghostly, reminding the viewer of the rapidly warming climate, of fires ranging through California, as well as many other parts of the globe. Indeed, some of the charcoal Wulf uses as mark-makers was collected from burnt trees in Northern California. Finally, Echoes takes on one more meaning: someday these pieces may be literal echoes, the only recording of a once great tree.
About the artist
Joan Wulf is a painter and mixed-media artist based in Los Angeles who explores the nexus of science and nature through reductive techniques. She focuses in particular on the five elements: water, wood, fire, earth and metal, which are transformed into collaborators in Wulf’s studio practice. She has variously burned, torched, sprayed, oxidized, ripped, and bent materials in her quest to distill nature to its most basic state. The resulting forms reveal the brutal and entropic processes that mold our natural world and underscore our fraught relationship with its elemental forces.
Wulf holds a BS from UC Davis and a BFA and MFA in Painting from the San Francisco Art Institute. Selected exhibitions include Themes+Projects Gallery in San Francisco, UCR Arts California Museum of Photography in Riverside, Quotidian Gallery and Jose Drudis-Biada Gallery in Los Angeles, 18th Street Arts Center, Arena1 Gallery and the Santa Monica Museum of Art in Santa Monica, and Villa Di Donato in Naples, Italy. Her work can be found in many public and private collections throughout the United States and Europe. She is a select member of the Los Angeles Art Association.
Open to the public; on view from January 8 to February 26, 2022