Scott Greene – High Wire

$4,000

SKU: 23390

Artwork Description

Scott Greene – High Wire

Dimensions: 17.75 x 11″ unframed
Year: 2010
Medium: oil on panel

Scott Greene’s oil on panel work, High Wire, represents an adaptation of the human heart. Rather than being made from ventricles and muscle, Greene’s version is composed of dangling orange wires and miscellaneous pieces of mechanical equipment and has been pulled from an implied, but absent, chest. Greene encourages the viewer to question why the heart hangs suspended in the air rather than contained within it’s owner’s body, and whether the item represents a form of technological transformation, where the very items we create have begun to create us anew.

Scott Greene’s work is not associated with a definitive time period, but instead, works to integrate art historical and classical elements into a more contemporary approach. Greene’s work functions as a form of socio-political commentary and “uses the composition of a historical work as a matrix for making a painting that humorously examines the relationship between politics, nature and culture”. Greene draws on themes such as beauty, popular culture, and the natural environment in an additive artistic process that emphasizes the visual and temporal effects of building rather than executing a work in a single instance. After studying in California and receiving his BFA in painting from the San Francisco Art Institute, Greene moved to New Mexico, where he received his MFA in painting and has since lived for almost 30 years. Greene’s work derives much of its influence from this matrix; where he describes that, “the expansive space, vivid light and western frame of reference informs the narrative content in my work, and the alien beauty of high desert skies serve as backdrops for many compositions”. Greene also touches on the complex interplay between beauty and environmental exploitation within his oeuvre—an issue he sees as being both pertinent to and prevalent within New Mexico, today.