Gina Siepel

Gina Siepel

  • Projects/Installations
    • To Understand a Tree (ongoing)
      • Tree and Site
      • Participants and Public Engagement
      • Green Woodworking
    • Living Material
    • FOREST-BODY-CHAIR
    • Cycle of Self-Determination
    • SELF-MADE
    • Chair and Tree Studies
    • Re-Surveying Walden
    • New World Reconsidered
    • The Versatile Queer-All
    • 1 x 1
    • A River Twice
    • The Boy Mechanic Project
    • The Coracles of Pignut Pond
    • The Candidate is Absent
    • CACOPHONY
    • Audubon's Birds
    • Portrait of Audubon
    • After Winslow Homer
    • Emma's Walk
    • King Philip Was a Warrior Bold...
    • Historic Site
    • Recursions
  • About
  • CV
  • Selected Press
    • "Self-Made, Gina Siepel’s queer coming-of-age story at Vox Populi Gallery," by Levi Bentley, ArtBlog Philadelphia, 2018
    • "Gina Siepel's Listening Trips," by Jacqueline Gleisner, Art21 Magazine, 2016
    • "To Understand a Tree: An Environmental Art Piece by Gina Siepel," by Shira Zaid, "The Sophian," 2020
    • "Gina Siepel: The Artist as Explorer," by Lauren Lessing, "Currents 6" exhibition catalog essay, Colby College Museum of Art, 2010
    • "Gina Siepel: Currents 6," by Carl Little, Art New England, 2011
  • Contact
Recursion I
2007
graphite on paper
30" x 22"
In mathematics, "recursion" is the repeated application of the same rule to a process. This and other algorithmic structures were useful to me in exploring the potential of emergent processes in drawing. These drawings explored the relationship between simplicity and complexity in visual information and generated abstraction in a hybridized, perception - based way. I began with a satellite image of a place I once called home, and applied two simple rules in order to transform it: a transformation of scale, and a transformation of material. The application of simple rule-based processes to the image of this former home radically transformed it, making the familiar strange and the strange familiar.


photo credit: Stephen Petegorsky

All images and text copyright 2006-2022 Gina Siepel. All rights reserved.

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