Meadows appeared in the desert through spring-fed grasses,
providing Las Vegas its name in 1821. The city glitters like an oasis, casting
a barrage of light in the shadows of the Spring Mountains. But like a mirage,
the promises of Las Vegas can be fickle.
The city’s landscape has shifted from canyon petroglyphs to the
Old Spanish Trail to a home for hydroelectric workers eager to lose themselves
in the pleasures of an illicit speakeasy or underground casino while building
the Hoover Dam. Las Vegas is known for
its glitz and glamorous facades, yet the underpinnings of the city rest on
rusted bones in the middle of the desert. Printmaking can be viewed in a
similar light - the intimate result of labor and process; malleable visual
expression that can both mimic and innovate.
SGCI
2018 Altered Landscapes will bring printmakers together to explore the tension
between reality & representation; alteration & reincarnation; ventures
& adventures; construction & decay. Altered Landscapes will capture the
spirit of Las Vegas’s perpetual reinvention and the fallacy of its promises.
Through dialogue and demonstrations, Altered Landscapes will explore
transformations in artist attitudes towards the natural environment, and
printmaking’s evolving roles in creative and social practice.