Margaret Boozer: What Exactly is Chaos?

Written by Lenny Campello
Published July 03, 2004
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In a second series of works (Intrusion series), Boozer removed chunks of dried tar that accumulates over the years in the guts of those stinky tar trucks that are always fixing up street cracks. The resulting forms are surprisingly sensual and organic.

Here again, the effect of randomness is complimented by the artist's sharp detection of the visual magnetism of these unexpected forms. Created by the ordained rotation of the tar truck's mixing mechanism over a period of years, and dried by the off and on process of the mixer's heating system, these forms are surprisingly interesting to the eye.

When hung on the wall, the shiny black forms sometimes resemble a horizontal beehive, but like no bee on Earth would build. Other pieces have a strange sexual association to them, as if we've been offered a voyeuristic view of a new sexual organ no one knew existed.

Lastly, she has pushed the envelope even further in one major piece titled "Angle of Incidence."

This work, is a living, wet, moist slab of porcelain slip that is still drying, unfinished... one would be tempted to say. As it dries, it will eventually "finish" - but not before the element of randomness is introduced and becomes part of it.

And in this piece, it is not just the random effect of how the material will crack and split as it dries. In its finished stage a few weeks from now, the work will also include the addition of fingerprints. "Ooops I didn't know it was wet," said the slim, blue-haired woman who touched it at the opening reception - her finger mark is now part of the artwork, as is the beer that her friend spilled on the slab, creating a yellowish film on the center of the work.

And thus randomness and the disquieting order of beer being spilled at an art opening, somehow align to help finish this piece.

In these visceral maps, organic sexual forms, and evolving works, Boozer has created something that is refreshingly new while being pleasant to the senses of visual enjoyment and mental intelligence. In this show, this artist has smashed her "label."

Margaret Boozer "Land/Marks" is at Strand on Volta Gallery, 1531 33rd Street, NW in Georgetown, Washington, DC until June 5, 2004. The gallery can be reached at 202.333.4663.

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F. Lennox Campello is a widely published Washington, DC and Philadelphia based art critic, as well as an award winning artist and curator. He is also often heard on NPR and the Voice of America discussing visual art issues. Campello also reports on Mid Atlantic area art news for the TV show ArtsMedia News.
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Margaret Boozer: What Exactly is Chaos?
Published: July 03, 2004
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Section: Culture
Writer: Lenny Campello
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