The following presents PART III of my in-depth interview with Philadelphia visual artist Mauro Zamora. . . . To jump to Part II click here, for Part I click here (or just scroll down.)
A continuous text of the full-length piece is available at the extension site.
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Part III - Interview with Mauro Zamora
SC: There are definite signatures as far as frameworks or premises that thread through your images—visually, contextually, both facets of practice.. and there are skews. So I’ll leave it open but couch it somewhat deliberately and ask for some perspective on the content and its connection to the situations you’re trying to submit, if not portray.
MZ: The content of my work…I can say that my work is about things that are on a fine line. So… I'm interested in growth and entropy. The silhouette is important because of its location in time. I’m interested in construction and destruction, which are maybe not so much fine-line but are definitely opponents of one another. I’m interested in both those aspects—growth/entropy and construction/destruction—in relation to nature. And then I’m interested in architecture, but architecture and nature are opposites of each other and cohorts to each other. So the content of my work has to do with those things and just describing the either/or.
...Recently it’s taken on a bit more of a political context, but all those issues still deal with the initial issues I mentioned. Repercussions of war are obviously going to be to some extent growth and entropy, and construction and destruction; or destruction and then construction [Both Laugh]. So it makes sense that some of the issues in the world right now would play into the work. And to a smaller extent the fence-line has been a slow, reoccurring idea in the work as a symbol of this fine line. In some works there are situations where there’s a fence that’s keeping something from something else, or enshrining something.
SC: Contained and expansive spaces…
MZ: Right, I've made paintings with forests of dead trees behind a man-made wooden fence, in front of which sit palettes of fresh-cut wood. So there are fine lines there. And I’m hoping that people will catch those things and read that into the work. Overall the consensus I get from people is we love you’re work, but we don’t know what the hell it’s about. And that’s okay; eventually people will start to get it. The content is exciting to me because it’s really about Nothing. It’s about this space in-between and I like that space; it's more interesting to me than the "this" or the "that". So I’d like to continue to be entrenched in that gap in-between, and see what I can pull out of my hat.
SC: Obviously for me it’s a mark of a considered work that it’s not an effortless read. At the same time there is a difference between layered and buried, and on many levels the nuance and complexity of your work is sort of hidden in plain sight. The ideas are there in the images, you’re not specifying how they’re going to come through or work out, but you’re putting the concepts out there…
MZ: Well that’s the great lesson from Rauschenberg, right? He puts the images out there, and we give them meaning. And then people accuse him, ‘No, but you're the one choosing the images’, and he says, ‘Well, not really, you guys are choosing the images—because those are the images that are available.’ And in some ways I believe that. But in another way, the other thing he did was decide what images he put next to each other. It’s like what colors do you put next to each other, whether it’s a symbol or color they’re going to do something when they react. So I think about that a lot. I have signature things that repeat, but when I’m putting them together I’m thinking about their reaction to each other—in combination.
SC: That’s a critical lead, combination. Because you’re dealing with all these dichotomies, these contradictory forces, which are essentially interdependent, reciprocal, parts of a whole… And a major means of conveying this, really a key concept throughout your work, is juxtaposition; which is a very specific term. Something I’m particularly interested in, in terms of juxtaposition, is its relationship in your work to this idea of negation, or "forcing negations" as you wrote. Which I see as having a lot to do with treading that line, because if you go one way or the other you create extreme oppositions, and that’s decidedly not what you’re doing.
MZ: Negations, right. The most obvious one for me is the fact that as an artist I make paintings, which are objects, and the whole weighty history, the three-thousand pound bag you carry behind you when you make a painting. And then as an artist I also make installations, which have a very light bag, ten fifteen years maybe. And while I make the object at the same time I negate it by making this ephemeral thing that’s going to die. And within the work there’s a lot of that as well…an image of the land or trees or nature– behind a fence. And that has to do, in a big way, with our current attitude globally. We’re doing that and have been doing that for a long, long time now, all over the world, we’re going into a third century of negating the land at every step. We’re not living with it, we’re doing things to it, or we’re forcing it to do what we want it to do, and sometimes not even for our survival - for aesthetic reasons. Suburbia and its history connected issues have played into my thinking about this in the past. I like being sort of a hatchet man by saying, "Oh, look at those trees! – Let’s chop them all down," "Oh, let’s look at this building!- Let’s tear it down," "Oh, let’s look at this expanse of land!– Lets wrap it all in fences." I feel our situation in general is a lot like that, in our Western experience at least. I feel I'm reflecting a lot of what’s going on and just trying to deal with it for myself, in a… subtle way.
SC: That’s the next part I want to get to—within that, the subtlety. Your visual choices and decisions, your aesthetic, I think plays into maintaining or instilling that ambiguity. Even how you just relayed it, that cadence…"On one hand [upward inflection], On the other [downward inflection]," that’s very descriptive of the dynamic within the images. There’s an equilibrium, but it’s drawn between these categorical divisions. And to some extent, in my perception, that has to do with visual measures of negation. You could make your pictures more violently aesthetically asserting these oppositions.
MZ: Well, as I said, I’m a big believer in, at least visually, getting to your point over time. I think I would rather be thoughtful than clever [Laughs] and that kind of takes time. So the subtlety needs…I don’t feel that it should be extreme. And I don’t necessarily want it to be extreme, and I don’t necessarily think extreme images make for beautiful images that people want to look at, or, I should say that I want to look at.
SC: Or that maybe you spend more time looking at or thinking about either, as we’ve said.
MZ: I think there's a difference between subtlety and say pornography, because a pornographic image whether it’s sexual or violent is shocking—but it’s fast.
SC: Exactly.
MZ: Where as a subtle image is slow. I like the slow one more than I like the shocking one, and I'm sure that influences my visual choices within an image.
SC: I’d definitely say, as well, that subtle and slow is more challenging in terms of creating. Again it’s a matter of exploring that line, generating that tension, and it’s a hard line to tread…or to find, or to keep—it’s an intricate balance.
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MZ: Something else that comes to mind when you talk about that place in-between is that in order to be there you have to understand the past, and being there helps you understand the future. So when you think about that fine line it really does read like the present. You can't be in the present, ever, because it’s fleeting.
SC: It’s impossible.
MZ: It’s impossible. So like the gloaming, like time, like memory …
SC: History.
MZ: History… all those things can be skewed or read in a different way, misunderstood or interpreted, and that’s how we experience our present, it’s all a series of perspectives; different points of view.
SC: And the ambiguity is part of the present too, right? Because it’s in flux, that’s pretty much the definition of the present. And it’s really the only time that’s in flux, because you can’t change the past--
MZ: You really can’t change either/or. You don’t know the future and you can’t alter the past.
SC: You make your decisions about what it is, and that’s how you continue with it.
MZ: And that’s it. So you’re on this fine line, constantly, between back there and up there. I think about that a lot in relation to the horizon. The fine line is our vantage point when we view the horizon—which is the future, right? Things will be better over there or on the other side. When you’re on a hike you’re going to that place, you’re always moving towards it.
SC: But you never actually get there.
MZ: You don’t reach it, so you're constantly between what’s back behind you and what’s beyond the horizon in front of you. So it has to do with that line between things. Or that place where the cycle turns, where it goes from being one thing to another, is that line—but it’s a cycle, so it goes back around. So, again, that’s why nature plays into my work, and why the landscape is somewhat important to my work, because it’s how we perceive these things in a way.
SC: Let’s get into the why of landscape then, which is another historically weighted area, Art-wise.
MZ: I guess the landscape is important to me because we live on it. In the system we inhabit we don’t live in the sky, we don’t live in space, we live on the land—so our relationship with it and to it is very important. I think that all our situations as humans will always come back to the land: what we do to the land, how we treat the land, how we use and don’t use the land, how we destroy the land… cause we’re on it, there’s no getting around that. So landscape plays into my work more in a political sense than in an Arcadian sense. It’s funny because of all the different kinds of painters to turn out to be, growing up being a landscape painter was the least of my interests [Laughs], and I guess that’s what I am the most is maybe a landscape painter. But I’m not interested in those general or painterly ideas of landscape, I don’t sit around and look at Gainsborough paintings or landscape painters from the past, that isn’t what drives the work. The land is where stuff happens, that’s the interest for me. And again those places, those fine lines between nature and architecture, growth and entropy, destruction and construction, that’s all tied to it as well.
...A major influence I didn’t mention before is The Center For Land Use Interpretation. What’s interesting to me about this group is that they’re documenting how we’re using the land. From the nineteenth century until now what we’ve done to the land is really important to our survival, and our political perspectives, our economical situation… it effects a lot of things that aren’t necessarily thought about, I feel. And if they are, they’re not thought about in the same way that I’m thinking about them [Laughs]. So that’s why I make them. That’s why the landscape plays a role in the work. But it’s almost like this periphery, because I'm interested in that fine line and it just so happens that line falls on the land.
SC: How do you see your work moving forward along that line, on a broader scope? Or a question might be is there something overall you never quite get, and that’s what keeps you working?
MZ: The only thing that keeps me painting is the sense that one day I wont have to paint. That’s what keeps me painting—trying to figure out how I’m not going to make paintings.
SC: Are you hoping one day to be able to achieve something that gets beyond Painting, or beyond the need to qualify it as such.
MZ: I'd like to get to the point where I don’t need Painting.
SC: Painting or paint?
MZ: Painting. The act of painting is a way of making an artwork, but there are many different ways of making an artwork. And this all comes out of the artists I'm interested in, a great majority of whom make paintings but they’re not painters—there's something interesting to me in that situation, how does one attain that? And the only way I can think of doing it right now is to bring myself to that point where the ideas I'm dealing with eventually push me to not necessarily need to make paintings to deal with them. Or maybe in dealing with those ideas I'm going to constantly push myself to make paintings. But that reluctance to be categorized as one thing or the other I think helps keep what I make…good.
SC: I agree.
MZ: I don’t want to have a bag of tricks, and I don’t want to make the same paintings or only make paintings. It’s simplistic in some sense. And a lot of people have said to me, "Well, just don’t make paintings, make something else." But it’s not that simple for me. I don’t think there's much other explanation than that I just have to continue on this track until the things that come to mind allow for something else to happen. Obviously I don’t think my subject matter is going to change. I think the strength of my work is only going to come out of keeping that content the same and exploring it to an incredible, detailed microscopic and macroscopic level. It’s ambiguous enough of a content to be able to allow a lot different things.
SC: I think the significance is in your giving two options to the progression. In that the image right now insists you use paint, or maybe because painting is the medium you work in you can’t necessarily separate that from how the images surface. But the fact that you're pushing it in increments outside of this, and also not negating the idea that it could stay within painting, that it could be one or the other—thats vital.
MZ: The only way to really contribute to the discussions that have gone on historically is to question the discussions that have gone on historically. Right now, I happen to find myself as a painter. The only way I'm going to contribute anything to Painting, so to speak, is to question it extensively and maybe be skeptical of it for myself. How else am I going to say anything about it if I'm not questioning it’s structure or how it works? And you’re talking to me only after five years of production, who knows what the next five years will bring, what the next twenty years will bring. I don’t know. I have an idea, but I don’t know. All I can do is what I'm doing now. And the questioning of it is really important to me because it’s the only thing, I think, that will allow me to get better at how I do what I do.
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The artist Mauro knows who he'd like to see interviewed is HIRO SAKAGUCHI
Hope you enjoyed the debut interview. Any feedback on the piece, or the site in general, is more than welcome - hit the COMMENTS link below to voice it to the public. Inquiries about the content, requests for clarification, or thoughts you'd like to share with me directly can be sent to: sharcohn.stops@gmail.com
And- the connections won't always work this directly, but I'm excited to announce my next conversation will indeed feature local Philadelphia artist HIRO SAKAGUCHI. Visual lead-ins to start shortly.




























