Jared Packard

Region: West

 
Packard’s paintings understand the canvas as an archive for actions and attitudes that examine how formal and material relationships can reflect on the construction of identity. These works began their life as a drop canvas on the floor of the artist’s studio, where they collected daily accidents and drippings, cleaned brushes, and excess paint. These drop canvases are fragmented, then reassembled into a community of works with a shared history and culture, yet each piece operates as an individual. For Packard, these ripped-apart and haphazardly repaired paintings on raw, unprotected canvas represent a queer, HIV-positive world that falls short of norms, expectations, and ideals. Packard shoehorns together disparate gestures—uninhibited, gratuitous expression and controlled, analytical forms. The inherent values in these contradictory gestures generate a shared visual lexicon by quoting and reinterpreting one another to explore and complicate the ways we perform identity.