InTensions | Aesthetics of Affliction
Issue 1.0 Spring 2008

Disorderly Presences

By Lauren O'Neal, Massachussets (U.S.)

I see my artwork as a collection of unwieldy characters. They possess an inner life of hopes and fears, wonder and mischief, even though they sometimes inhabit the world as unheroic and often disorderly presences-those “late for a very important date” types, who aim to pull it all together but most of the time don’t quite manage. I am interested in what enactment and exaggeration can bring to bear on the slightly uncomfortable dialectic between intimacy and anonymity, movement and stasis, belonging and alienation. I tend to use a mix of found objects, such as chairs and coats, often juxtaposed with commonplace materials including string, tape, and lights, to create a space in which ambiguity and longing act as motors. My sources of inspiration range from business protocol to theatrical set design, where there is a steady rhythm between sameness and difference. The contingent and contextual nature of my work requires that meaning be generated through a series of encounters: between the work and myself, the work and the viewer, or simply the elements of the work in dialogue with each other, ignoring the rest of us completely.

Contact: Lauren.ONeal@mcla.edu


View of installation, Disorderly Presences by Lauren O'Neal View of installation, Disorderly Presences by Lauren O'Neal View of installation, Disorderly Presences by Lauren O'Neal View of installation, Disorderly Presences by Lauren O'Neal