Bridget Mullen
There’s a low-grade hum of unease with me all the time. It’s the
awareness of now, and how quickly now vanishes and how I am
constantly stepping into the unknown. It’s the reason the content
of my work is found in the process of making it. I want to own
the uncertainty by amplifying it through making images I’ve
never (consciously) thought of or seen before. No planning, just
improvising. This way of generating ambiguous imagery results in
work that resists succinct narratives.
My materials range from canvas and paper to pillowcases and
rocks. I change up my materials to react to new painting surfaces
and to avoid habitual mark making. My political, personal, and
interpersonal identities, fears, and desires are present in my
work (though often subliminally) because they are present in
everything I do. My process hinges on trusting the visual realm as
an arena for realization.
This freedom from restraint in my process draws out and
acknowledges the validity of meaning that cannot be explained in
words.