Artists

Shay Kun
Shay Kun
“Terms and Conditions”, oil on canvas, 2011, 36” x 30”
Shay Kun
“Stakes Is High”, oil on canvas, 2011, 80.5” x 48.5”
Shay Kun
“Skeleton”, oil on canvas, 2011 30” x 20”
Shay Kun
“Scavengers”, oil on canvas, 2011, 70” x 41”
Shay Kun
“Intoxicated Demons”, oil on canvas, 2011 30” x 24“
Shay Kun
“All Unquiet Things“oil on canvas, 2010-2011, 30” x 20”
Shay Kun
“Glory Days”, oil on canvas, 2011, 64” x 40”
Shay Kun
“Greatest Misses”, oil on canvas, 2011 36” x 30”
Shay Kun
“I’ll Sleep When You’re Dead”, oil on canvas, 2010-2011, 30” x 24”

Artist Info

These works are an infusion, a hybrid of absurdities. Drawing on the style and subject matter of the Hudson River School, particularly Thomas Cole’s reverent paeans to nature and Albert Bierstadt’s awestruck visions of the sublime in the American West, these works capture the grandeur of nature. Despite acquiring a newly cultured look, these landscapes, made with sincerity and attention, are transformed into a juxtaposition of nature and its human invaders, who appear in the guise of tourists or adventure seekers. The contrast between these contemporary characters and their stylized environment is abrupt and, despite their small scale, they are an almost offensively inadequate substitute for the deities or characters of noble bearing that filled their place in the painting of the past centuries.

The elements populating these series of paintings of the American West are small but obnoxious, infesting nature more so than enjoying its restorative powers. While Cole and his colleagues ascribed spiritual qualities to the environment, and warned of the destruction being caused by expansion, here the damage has been done. Lakes are littered with junked cars and pristine vistas blighted by tightropes, rickety bridges and other evidence of human interlopers. Still, what these visitors leave are their traces; they have not overwhelmed the environment and its magical possibilities.