
Neil Forrest, Hiving Mesh
Catalog of an exhibition at Saint Mary's University Art Gallery, Halifax, Feb. 19-Mar. 18, 2000. Includes bibliographical references.
Hiving originates in the study of abscessed cones from a single conifer tree on the edge of the ocean where I live. My negotiation with this natural aberration in is to present a floating crystalline society of porcelain figures. The scaffolding system never permits contact among the individuals.
Three interconnected and suspended screens of hexagonal geometry hold the ceramic nodes in tension. The face of the ornament is like a cut...a hive sliced. The first of the three layers make reference to insect hives and colonies, and the only place of colour. The anterior layers are without colour and signify the misfiring of the reproduction zone.
The Mesh has no hierarchy and both figure and ground are interchangeable, a space where fixed positions are less viable than unstable ones.
Publisher: Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Nova Scotia
Publication Date: 2000
Binding: Paperback


