DVAA Member since 2023

Monique Gordon


 

About:

Monique Gordon finds homes for discarded objects, blurring the line between the magical and the mundane. Like the work of Tschabala Self, Wangehi Mutu, and Winifred Rembert, Gordon’s collages rescue ordinary matter like garlic peelings, candy wrappers, orange leaves from a compost pile and roots these objects in purpose. Known for her bright pastels and dreamy watercolors, of multi-dimensionality Gordon says: “I like texture because I like to feel.”


Gordon's work-in-progress is a series of nature images that documents the pre-colonial Lenni Lenape presence in Philadelphia. Gordon lives in Philadelphia.

Artist Statement:

My art uses physicality, memory, and futurity to endow discarded or overlooked objects and places with renewed purpose. Re-contextualize. Repurpose. Preserve. These three words embody the tenants of my work across mediums. My collages create a theory of meaning, as I pull together scraps of seemingly unrelated and unmeaningful material content — foil, pastel, candy wrappers, watercolors, garlic peelings, ink — and locate new significance in these objects. What was once leftovers from a meal, trash, or nature becomes fertile ground for thinking about the sacredness in all corners of life. My art is a practice of radical care, conservation and lifeforce.


Dimensionality and texture give me physical access to an interior world of feeling and knowing. I feel; therefore, I know. I know; therefore, I see. In a recent multi-media project entitled Tribal Voice, I brought an old art piece into its new life. I look at objects and artworks and I see shapes and lives within them. With this project, I saw the shape of a body and began to cut the old sheet of cardboard into my new vision.
My art materials, often taken from that which is available in my kitchen or what grows on my neighborhood’s block, are subject to precarious lives. I often have to ask myself, “will this melt, will this last?”. And that same urgency to preserve raw matter in my work bleeds into my own urgency to preserve historical memory within my art.
My work is obsessed with renewal and feminine energy, that which sustains and nurtures us all.