Eye Exam
A Picture Book
Jason Foumberg
Great stories, from the comic to the tragic, are born from conflict. Boy gets girl, boy loses girl; Man versus Nature; Man versus himself: these are the recurring dramatic archetypes that reel through Lora Fosberg’s drawings. Using primarily ink and gouache on found paper—old ledgers, diaries and prescription pads—Fosberg renders the small struggles of daily existence. Each page, browned with age, features a single scenario, a distilled symbol or a glimpse through a small frame of the mind that Fosberg has captured. The pages are then pasted side-by-side on large canvases, four-by-five feet, like a jumbled storyboard. It is fitting, then, that Fosberg has collected ten years’ worth of drawings and canvases in a book, a format that underscores the narrative aspect of her work.
A motif in Fosberg’s drawings concerns man’s place in nature. Fosberg doesn’t rely on personal anecdotes to relate this conflict. Instead, she culls the stock from her iconography, as she calls it, to represent the constant push and pull between civilized discipline and wild freedom: Man versus Nature. Voices float through the drawings: Why do I keep doing it to myself; Here is where it’s gonna count; Don’t smoke Don’t drink Don’t think; Now Never What? When? The stream of banter keeps us inhibited, and in check. On the opposite shore, so to speak, of Fosberg’s iconography, rowboats are constantly stuck in choppy waters and one-man airplanes seem to always be landing on deserted islands. No Thanks, someone has spelled out with tree trunks on the beach where the plane has crashed. No Really… I’m Fine is spelled out below an island with all the implements for survival spread around a woman relaxing on a tree stump. Seen retrospectively in the book, the symbols and icons of Fosberg’s past ten years of art-making follow this consistent and contained narrative of self-sufficiency, its failures and successes.
The call of the wild, as it were, beckoned Fosberg to the forests of Michigan where she bought a summer cottage several years ago. “I’m a nature buff,” says Fosberg. Leaving Chicago on the weekends provided respite and inspiration for her drawings, most of which were created in her 3,500 square-foot, light-filled Bucktown studio. The story of Man versus Man, or Artist versus Gentrification, came to a climax one year ago when the landlord of the building on Damen Avenue, who for many years made it affordable for artists to live and work in such a glorious location, sold the space to commercial developers. Now, Fosberg’s former studio, which can be seen in several black-and-white photographs in the book, has been replaced by the Marc Jacobs store. Fosberg has since taken up residence in her Michigan forest cottage, where the idea of creating a book came into play. Since so much of the work is based on her personal experiences dividing time between city and forest, the interruption provided a moment to reflect on a ten-year body of work. The book is aptly titled “The End of the Beginning.”
“I always knew I wanted to be an artist,” says Fosberg, whose mother owned a print shop, so a supply of paper was always readily available and appealing for a kid “who grew up with a pen in the hand.” Fosberg is the type of person who will pick up any scrap of paper with writing on it found in the street or sidewalk, a dried leaf plucked by the wind off the tree of someone’s life. Peering into a small section of a life, and dreaming up banalities and desires, is an evocative practice living in a city of strangers—perhaps all we need is the confirmation that others are prone to self-doubt, boredom, heartbreak and resiliency.
The End of the Beginning is printed in an edition of 1,000 and available at Quimby’s, Linda Warren Gallery, the Museum of Contemporary Art and lorafosberg.com, $40.
(2008-07-29)
LINKS TO RELATED SITES
- My Personal Website
- HAT Speaker Website
- My INC. Blog Posts
- My THREADS profile
- My Wikipedia Page
- My LinkedIn Page
- My Facebook Page
- My X/Twitter Page
- My Instagram Page
- My ABOUT.ME page
- G2T3V, LLC Site
- G2T3V page on LinkedIn
- G2T3V, LLC Facebook Page
- My Channel on YOUTUBE
- My Videos on VIMEO
- My Boards on Pinterest
- My Site on Mastodon
- My Site on Substack
- My Site on Post
LINKS TO RELATED BUSINESSES
- 1871 - Where Digital Startups Get Their Start
- AskWhai
- Baloonr
- BCV Social
- ConceptDrop (Now Nexus AI)
- Cubii
- Dumbstruck
- Gather Voices
- Genivity
- Georama (now QualSights)
- GetSet
- HighTower Advisors
- Holberg Financial
- Indiegogo
- Keeeb
- Kitchfix
- KnowledgeHound
- Landscape Hub
- Lisa App
- Magic Cube
- MagicTags/THYNG
- Mile Auto
- Packback Books
- Peanut Butter
- Philo Broadcasting
- Popular Pays
- Selfie
- SnapSheet
- SomruS
- SPOTHERO
- SquareOffs
- Tempesta Media
- THYNG
- Tock
- Upshow
- Vehcon
- Xaptum
Total Pageviews
GOOGLE ANALYTICS
Blog Archive
-
▼
2008
(572)
-
▼
August
(59)
- Flashpoint Academy Featured in UR Chicago Magazine...
- FLASHPOINT ACADEMY - FIRST VIDEO FROM FOREIGNER CO...
- Flashpoint Academy Welcomes Noted Filmmakers DA PE...
- FLASHPOINT ACADEMY CREW FILMS VIVA! FESTIVAL FOR M...
- NEW FLASHPOINT ACADEMY FILM DEBUTS ON YOUTUBE
- Flashpoint Academy Film Crews Shoot Foreigner Conc...
- Flashpoint Academy Film Crews Shoot Foreigner Conc...
- Flashpoint Academy Film Crews Shoot Foreigner Conc...
- Flashpoint Academy Film Crews Shoot Foreigner Conc...
- Flashpoint Academy Film Crews Shoot Foreigner Conc...
- Flashpoint Academy Film Crews Shoot Foreigner Conc...
- Flashpoint Academy Film Crews Shoot Foreigner Conc...
- Tullman Collection Artist Sharon Sprung in New One...
- Tullman Collection Artist Eric Wert in New Show at...
- FP Academy Picnic Pix
- Newest Ad from Flashpoint Academy
- Paula and Perry Represent Flashpoint Academy at SI...
- HAT Tour Photos from THREADLESS
- Tullman Collection Artist Marc Dennis in Article i...
- Flashpoint Academy Dean Paula Froehle Presents Pan...
- Latest Ad from Flashpoint Academy
- HAT Speaks on Flashpoint Academy and Entrepreneurs...
- "GROWING UP TULLMAN" in BUSINESS WEEK SMALL BIZ MA...
- Flashpoint Academy Crew Begins Filming Air and Wat...
- HAT and Flashpoint Academy Featured in Bruno Behre...
- HAT and Flashpoint Academy Featured in Crains Vide...
- TULLMAN COLLECTION ARTIST JORGE SANTOS FEATURED IN...
- TULLMAN COLLECTION ARTIST D.J.HALL IN 35-YEAR RETR...
- TULLMAN COLLECTION ARTIST JARED JOSLIN IN NEW SHOW
- FLASHPOINT ACADEMY JOINS OVER 300 NOMINEES FOR ILL...
- ACTOR AND DIRECTOR MATTHEW MODINE VISITS FLASHPOIN...
- Flashpoint Academy Begins Operation of Motion Capt...
- Flashpoint Academy Installs First Portable Broadca...
- Shooting Continues on Feature Film by Flashpoint A...
- New Art for the Tullman Collection from the Danger...
- Another Review of the Dangerous Women Show Featuri...
- Flashpoint Academy Team Headed by Joe Gallo Films ...
- Latest Ad from Flashpoint Academy
- Another Win for Flashpoint Academy Student Filmmak...
- Flashpoint Academy Featured in Chicago Tribune Art...
- Latest Ad from Flashpoint Academy
- Flashpoint Academy Film - The Collector- Leads off...
- Flashpoint Academy Students Work on Sets at Mercha...
- Flashpoint Academy - Builders Association newslett...
- More Great Press and a Tribune Photo Session for "...
- ART NORMAN FROM NBC TV RETURNS TO FLASHPOINT ACADE...
- Latest Ad from Flashpoint Academy
- Installation Shots from Tullman Collection Artist ...
- NEW PAINTINGS FOR TULLMAN COLLECTION FROM AARON WHITE
- TULLMAN COLLECTION ARTIST SCOTT PRIOR - NEW WORK A...
- TULLMAN COLLECTION ARTIST LAURA BALL IN NEW SHOW A...
- Sunday Shots of Flashpoint Academy Crews at Lollap...
- Saturday Wrap Shots for Flashpoint Academy Crews a...
- Nice Review in New City for Tullman Collection Art...
- Tullman Collection Artist Sharon Shapiro in New Sh...
- More Flashpoint Academy Updates from LOLLA - Love ...
- Flashpoint Academy Student Crew and Q101 Team Up f...
- Flashpoint Academy Student Team Continues Shooting...
- Barry Moltz Visits Flashpoint Academy to Speak to ...
-
▼
August
(59)