| Meditative CompulsiveJuly 18, 2007- September 15, 2007Artist’s Statement:
Repetitive images and grids are the foundation of my work. The image, which is a circle or oval, is repeated to represent development. The grid represents the barriers and obstacles of contemporary life. I work primarily on paper because I love the spontaneity of drawing and am very interested in the surface and edges of paper. I am fascinated by the creative process as one mark leads to the next mark and one drawing develops into the next drawing. I always want to be free to see where the creative process will take me. I am often fascinated and surprised by what develops.
My most recent body of work is very labor intensive and meditative. The finished drawings look very serene because of the small fluctuations in shadow but on closer viewing an obsessive quality becomes apparent. Upon reflection, I have been exploring the seeming contradiction between obsession and meditation.
Artist’s Biography:
Joyce Siegel creates her work in Long Island City but was born and resides in New York City. She received a B.S. in Economics in 1982 from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and worked on Wall Street for 10 years.
While living in London, Siegel became fascinated with paintings, sculpture, and especially drawings. She is primarily a self-taught artist and much of what she has learned has come from her interaction with and observation of great art. She scoured the galleries and museums in London and New York in order to achieve her style and developed her techniques by taking several art classes at the Arts Students League, The New York Studio School, The School of Visual Arts and Anderson Ranch. Siegel spent a month at the artist colony Yaddo during the summer of 2006. She has worked with Jerry Salz, Suzanne Joelson, and more recently with Shazia Sikander and Joan Snyder.
Siegel has worked with children from The Dalton School, P.S. 6 and the 92nd Street Y Nursery School creating large-scale grid drawings. The drawings incorporate sentences, letters, marks, and words generated by the children. The entire student body is involved in the drawings, which have raised significant funds for these institutions.
Siegel primarily works with water-based products on paper. She is very intrigued by the surface and edges of paper. Siegel has always been fascinated by the creative process-- one mark leading to the next mark, as well as one drawing developing into the next drawing.
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