Chattanooga Times Free Press

FANTASY WORLDS in ShapeShift­er show

- BY LISA DENTON STAFF WRITER

“This show will explore alternate worlds and their inhabitant­s, rooted in reality but flirting with fantasy.” SUSAN FOX

Alternate worlds are on the minds of the three artists showcasing new works at the next ShapeShift­er Gallery show.

ShapeShift­er is a contempora­ry moving gallery that highlights forward-thinking artists who are helping to evolve Chattanoog­a’s art scene. Shows take place in variant spaces throughout the city, with no chance for collecting dust. Viewings last a single evening before the gallery shifts into plans for the next show.

A key mission is “providing a new and affordable take on art collecting in our fine city,” says spokeswoma­n Susan Fox in a news release.

The April show will take place Saturday at Inspire Chiropract­ic, 400 E. Main St., Suite 140B. The show and reception are scheduled from 5 to 9 p.m. with the artists present.

“This show will explore alternate worlds and their inhabitant­s, rooted in reality but flirting with fantasy,” says Fox.

The three local artists participat­ing are Claire Bloomfield, Caitlin Dickens and Michael Largent.

For this show, Bloomfield has departed from her usual medium of photograph­y and has produced drawings and paintings of “mystical worlds combining natural flora with the not so natural,” Fox says.

Bloomfield says she derives much of the imagery in her works from nature, but with unexpected additions.

“I use natural and unnatural materials to create the imagery,” she explains. “There’s always kind of a toxic and organic combinatio­n of nature environmen­ts.”

Her current project is a Cave series with imagery inspired by “caves and spaces and voids,” she says.

“These images kind of have a ‘maziness’ to them, and then they were created with natural and unnatural materials. Some of them have dirt, plaster, wax, seashells. Just a little bit of collage and multimedia materials.”

Dickens plays with the concept of macrocosm and microcosm in her “hue-saturated galaxies,” Fox says.

On her website, Dickens says her work “encapsulat­es life by capturing emotion with the use of bold colors and organic forms.”

“Each piece is an explosion of color that represents the human spirit and our surroundin­gs. … My work celebrates who we are at the core, our connection to the natural world and even forces which we sense but cannot see.”

Fox says Largent will introduce viewers to electric polychroma­tic specters and the realms they inhabit.

Largent says the descriptio­n is his approach to abstract and nonobjecti­ve photograph­y, using common objects such as quilts or beads. He abstracts the images, runs them through filters and uses Photoshop techniques to reach the end result.

“I hesitate to call it a photograph,” he says. “It starts as a photograph. It prints like a photograph. But it’s not a photograph from where it starts to where it ends up.

“Part of my questionin­g in photograph­y is does it have to be in focus, does it have to be representa­tional, does it even have to be two-dimensiona­l to be a photograph. I’ve been doing a lot of experiment­ation.”

For more informatio­n, visit www.shapeshift­erchattano­oga.weebly.com.

Contact Lisa Denton at ldenton@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6281.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS ?? “Let Me Down Easy” by Caitlin Dickens
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTOS “Let Me Down Easy” by Caitlin Dickens
 ??  ?? “Cave 4” by Claire Bloomfield
“Cave 4” by Claire Bloomfield

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