Nick Pena
I’m interested in the American Dream, the history of landscape
painting, and the effects that “cultural ideals” have on both our
environment and our national psyche. Persistently researching
these topics has led me to create landscapes built on dichotomies:
past and present, representation and abstraction, analog and
digital, and stability and instability.
In my most recent series, I began exploring the tradition of
decoration and painting, specifically the tradition of using a mat to
“frame” artwork. A mat is a cut-out piece of paper-based material
that separates the artwork from the glass of the frame and
serves as an additional visual element. I activate this commonly
overlooked material by using a nontraditional material, Sintra (a
rigid sheet of PVC), and digitally drawing, using vector graphics,
a “negative landscape” that is then excised. Though this cut-out
might, at first glance, look hand-made, the astute viewer will
realize that its precision is mechanically produced. The mat has
been transformed from inactive decoration to digitally produced
veil, adding meaning on multiple levels.