January 29 - March 12, 2006
Opening
Reception January 29, 2-4 PM
Artist Statement: /Third
Space/ consists of sixteen images, 30 feet x 78 inches, and
are color type C prints. These images were taken along the
2,000-mile United States and Mexico border. There is one image
for every twin border town with in the series. The term "twin"
is commonly used to reference border towns where one can cross
back and forth entering either Mexico or the United States.
Each single image incorporates two images, which diffuse into
one incorporating both sides of each "twin" border city.
My last series, /Landuse/, investigated urbanization
concentrating on reality, yet also imagination. Third Space
focuses on urbanization again, but this time points at a very
real phenomenon: interdependent cultures that have become so
closely linked that their urban spatial qualities have
diffused together. The US/Mexico border is the largest and
most active border in the world. More than 300,000 people
cross daily that are legal, and many more who are not. Another
monumental change that has caused interdependence to the
border cities came with NAFTA when US owned plants were be
built on both sides. This twin plant system has caused a surge
of workers to migrate to the northern border cities.
It is not my intention to adjudicate the multiplicity
of conflicting perceptions of the border with this work.
Instead, the border is seen as a "third space" between two
contiguous nations. It is a place of inter-connection,
interdependence, globalism, and transnationalism. /Third
Space/ depicts spatial qualities in detail, which inform the
place of the border. There are distinctive patterns that form
because of the transborder interdependence that are spatial,
social, economic and cultural. Within both sides of the
political boundary differences become blurred. /Third Space/
elicits complex ideas and notions by visualizing the border
through work that underscores the dichotomies and paradoxes
that illustrate the urbanization diffusion and interconnection
of the border cities. For example in image #7 a hydroelectric
plant is shown which is in Eagle pass, Texas. The other part
of the image shows a sub station in Piedras Negras, Mexico.
These cites often have voltage instability and feed
electricity back and forth when either one needs help. This
image exemplifies their connection and their need for shared
resources. Image #14 shows two stucco middle class houses: one
in Presidio Texas and the other in Ojinaga, Mexico. Here you
can see both houses incorporate the same architectural styles
with arches and ornate fences around the homes. Each is made
from stucco and each is painted with bright colors. There is a
front patio outside of both houses. Both of the homes are
aligned next to dirt roads. There is very clear connection
spatially and culturally within this image.
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Whitney Stolich Artist Bio: Born in
Monterey, California Whitney Stolich spent her entire
childhood on a fifty-acre horse ranch. Having lived in so much
open space she questioned urban spaces and decided to immerse
herself into one of the largest, Los Angeles, in 1993 to
attend Loyola Marymount University. She chose to major in
Urban Studies in an attempt to understand the choices that
were made within cities and their surrounding areas. Four
years after graduating from LMU with a B.A. she attended Otis
College of Art and Design to further her studies. She obtained
an M.F.A. in 2004.
Her work is primarily photographic.
Stolich's body of work, /Landuse/, incorporates her intense
interests in urbanism and at the same time implements them
into a conceptual mode by taking real images of different
types of land uses in Southern California, which make the
viewer question whether these images are real or fiction. This
work was shown at Supersonic in 2004 where Stolich received a
special mention in a rave review by art critic Edward Goldman.
Creative Artists Agency purchased a piece from Landuse for
their private collection in 2005.
Since finishing
/Landuse/ Stolich has been working on a new body of work
called /Third Space/, which deals with complex urbanization
issues along the 2,000-mile US/Mexico border. Third Space
investigates the 16 twin border cities and their independent
cultures, which Stolich says have become so closely linked
their urban spatial qualities have fused together. It is not
Stolich's intention to adjudicate the multiplicity of
conflicting perceptions of the border with this work. Instead,
Stolich sees the border as a "third space" between two
contiguous nations. Stolich says that her passion for urban
issues will keep her work on a continued path divulging into
different land use and urban topics.
Whitney
Stolich's website
Contact:
Angels Gate Cultural Center
3601
South Gaffey Street, San Pedro, California 90731
Phone:
310-519-0936, Fax: 310-519-8698
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