Nancy Evans Takes Root at Jason Vass Gallery

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Tree. Lingam. Void. is a solo retrospective of work by Nancy Evans, a Los Angeles-based artist with some 40 years of nature-infused work in her oeuvre. At The Jason Vass Gallery through July 24th,  work in this exhibition was created in the last 15 years.

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Curated by Michael Duncan, her mysterious, sometimes brooding, sometimes triumphal work elegantly portrays archetypical images that transcend cultures and dwell in a gauzy, imaginative realm between faith and fairy tales. Evan’s first major solo project since 2012, the show is inspired both by her global travels and her spiritual travels through a variety of myths, rituals, and shared images.

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Evans says her work here is a mix of paint, paper, and sculpture, the sculpture bronze and aqua resin. Regardless of medium, the collection shares three different concepts, which interlock, weaving a story of the natural, the supernatural, the human, the god, and the dream.

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Above, Nancy Evans.

“Tree is a dissection of above and below. The tree connects consciousness to something bigger than yourself,” the artist says.

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“Void refers to the idea of floating in a dream like structure, floating over an abyss that could be positive or negative,” Evans explains.

Her use of color compels viewers to enter a new visual palette, fresh and awakening, the feeling of a dream within a dream, the completion of a virtual landscape.

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Lingam is a symbol for the Hindu deity Shiva, for the force of meeting matter to create existence, to create something out of nothing,” Evans asserts. The cylinder-like shape that symbolizes the deity recurs throughout Evan’s work, as do figurative forms representing Shiva and the Hindu deity Kali in her sculptures.

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Altogether, the Vass gallery is hosting a mystic experience, a whole shaped from three mysteriously wonderful parts. The exhibition is a visual swirl that transcends the obvious, and draws viewers into the “roots” of its trees, the unconscious space of the void, and the transcendent creation of lingam.

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The gallery is located at 1452 E. Sixth Street, in DTLA’s arts district.

  • Genie Davis; All Photos: Jack Burke