Alongside Maya
The art of John Marin has been taking a great deal of inspiration from Eastern spiritual and philosophical traditions, exploring the visual possibilities in the wealth of wisdom emerging from these traditions while incorporating his own interpretations of their resonance in contemporary society. His sustained engagement with these philosophies has also brought him to navigate a terrain dealing with issues of identity, the individual’s internal struggles, the burdens and baggage of existence, and seeking life’s purpose, among many others. In this solo exhibition, he converses with the Vedic concept maya, an illusion created by the magical powers of divinities which obstructs a human’s encounter with reality. Using this concept as a central theme, he presents a creative take on the age-‐old reflection about the illusory nature of human perception.
He comes up with portraits that emphasize the eyes as windows to the truth. In the compositions, the field surrounding the eyes is littered with distractions in the form of chaotic tangling of strokes, creating a blurry plane only cleared around the subject’s vision. The individuals in the portraits seem to be peeking through holes, their piercing gazes becoming invisible forces that penetrate the layer of mesh that renders them partially hidden from the viewer. With this intervention, the artist looks back to the association of the sense of sight to notions of truth, reality, illusion, and deceit, both in the visual and philosophical sense. Each portrait may speak about mediated forms of encountering and experiencing the world, be it through the handiwork of deities or spiritual forces, or through the lens of today’s technologies. These impediments from reality are bound to be transcended only by an extraordinary vision or a sharp, critical eye.
Curated by Ruel Caasi and in collaboration with The Working Animals Art Projects
Works
ALONGSIDE MAYA 1
ALONGSIDE MAYA 2
ALONGSIDE MAYA 3
ALONGSIDE MAYA 4
ALONGSIDE MAYA 5
ALONGSIDE MAYA 6