Since 1996, he has concurrently established a painting component (works
on canvas and other surfaces) an ongoing photo-performance component titled
‘the hand loves that which is hard’ (painting in situ), and
a writing component (text works as a means to theorize and narrate his
process). Historic notations have been developed in the work as a means
to connect the painted art objects produced to the specific notion of
painting-in-the-world.
C. Wells audits the
history of line marking, beginning with its origins in Trenton, Michigan
in 1911. Analogous to a sociocultural pursuit as much as one that is at
home in the realm of art making; his work explores implications between
the line marker and ideas of order and edicts. As a means of symbolic
communication as well as an aesthetic force within the landscape, the
line marker is thought of as an allegorical crest of urbanization - its
history significant but its contemporary use and future possibilities
just as compelling. Exploring how the line marker is utilized today as
a global and cross-cultural civic gesture to its metaphoric properties
that can signify everything from wanderlust to pop culture; Wells’
final emphasis is found in the line marker’s imageability as an
emblematic code. |