CHROMATROPE (2015) explores the resonance between two experiences of painting: painting as a contained object through which one understands a world, and painting as a theatrical medium with implications beyond itself. This work was installed at the …

CHROMATROPE (2015) explores the resonance between two experiences of painting: painting as a contained object through which one understands a world, and painting as a theatrical medium with implications beyond itself. This work was installed at the Confederation Centre for the Arts in Charlottetown, PEI. Curated by Pan Wendt

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Slicer, 54” x 48”, oil on canvas

Slicer, 54” x 48”, oil on canvas

The Glade, 48” x 48”, oil on canvas

The Glade, 48” x 48”, oil on canvas

The Riding Hour, 36” x 48”, oil on canvas

The Riding Hour, 36” x 48”, oil on canvas

Watch Duty, 48” x 36”, oil on canvas

Watch Duty, 48” x 36”, oil on canvas

The Interlocutors, 48” x 36”, oil on canvas

The Interlocutors, 48” x 36”, oil on canvas

The Glade, 54” x 48”, oil on canvas

The Glade, 54” x 48”, oil on canvas

Storm over the Aqueduct, 60” x 40”, oil on canvas

Storm over the Aqueduct, 60” x 40”, oil on canvas

Doubles on the Outskirts, 48” x 36”, oil on canvas

Doubles on the Outskirts, 48” x 36”, oil on canvas

The Demimondes Bouquet, 40” x 60”, oil on canvas

The Demimondes Bouquet, 40” x 60”, oil on canvas

Exhibition text by curator Pan Wendt -

One approaches Chromatrope in the dark, as if from behind a theatrical set that faces internally, and thus seems to delimit two sorts of experience, one openly contingent and constructed, and one totalizing and absorptive. Once inside the installations circular internal space, however, the situation becomes more complicated. Jessica Mensch's series of paintings, illuminated by changing theatrically colored lights, represents a superheated, dreamlike world that suggests a tropical demimonde, a summer evening of luxurious, but perhaps slightly poisonous and excessive colors. These are illusionary and fantastic pictures featuring figures and settings that drift in and out of credibility, like dreams or myths.

The installation sets up a tension between the contrary demands of painting, and arguably of art in general, those of revelation and illusion. On the one, the means of image making are explicitly on display, from the wooden, painted structures that hold the series of pictures in view at eye level, to the areas of paint that drift in and out of focus as the lights change, alternating from flat, abstract fields of color to shaded delineations of volume, both of things depicted, and the spaces they occupy. The devices of illusion, the mechanics of painting and its presentations in the artificial space of the gallery are laid out for us to see. The lighting looks like "lighting", a child of the representational apparatus of theatre. at the same time the paintings propose a mythic world with a vividness and immediacy that overwhelms both conceptual abstraction - the resting point of many painters who like to reveal the means of painting - and the "realism" of the installations material and object quality. The figures and settings of Chromatrope draw us into an illusionary place and time, even if they fail to cohere fully into conventional narrative or spatial consistency.

The paintings are base on miniature theatricals sets, their compositional structure derived from the lighting, costumes and backdrops of performances and videos by inflatable deities, an ongoing collaborative project between Mensch and artist Emily Pelstring. The decisions that make up an immersive event, as much as those that build a static painting are embodied in the resulting pictures, which follow the logic of a dreamlike performance. And the figures are characters; they play narrative and symbolic roles. The same is true of the vaguely filmic settings. Overt references to cultural continuity, to mythic structures, from the Greek temple to fabulist characters such as the predatory "Wolfman," live alongside figures of mobility and transience, like the streamlined car that appears in, and disrupts, one painting both as a fragment of moving image and the fragility of constructed space. In Chromatrope the theatrically illuminated night is a place of shifting identities: changing colors, liquids and solids, places that are both real and symbolic, and marauding, seductive beings whose desires and fears are unleashed. Invention opens both a space of freedom and a circular, trancelike nightmare of recurring archetypes.