D’Arcy Simpson Art Works Presents – Why Look? by Xan Peters

Opening Reception March 25th, 5-8 PM
On display until April 30th Fridays-Sundays, 12-5 PM

In Why Look?, Xan Peters asks the viewer what we can learn about our natural world when it comes to us as an artistic expression, free from the detachment of science.

The darkened halls of the Natural History Museum are places full of answers. We go there to seek context for our humanity through carefully constructed stories told by fossils, timelines, lingering artifacts and taxidermy. Some species come to life there–they become things of myth and legend. But some, probably most, never make it to the main halls. They are lost in obscurity, seemingly never to have lived–invisible ghosts of ancestors we never knew.

Xan Peters’ paintings rescue some of these species from their taxidermic prisons. He reveals their epic stories and shines a light (both figuratively and literally) on their short time on Earth. His paintings captivate, engage and encourage questions and connections. Why Look? asks the viewer to examine Nature in an art gallery–why look at nature here? What can we learn about our natural world when it comes to us as an artistic expression, free from the detachment of science?

His subjects are all extinct or in decline, captured in oil paintings that exude both drama and scientific detail. His technique is based in classical oil painting reminiscent of the Baroque Period, emphasizing dramatic lights and shadows, and deep, rich hues. There is a particular focus on idealized form in his work that glorifies these animals-there is no specter of death in these portraits-only glowing, exuberant life.

“I seek the subjective that lies beneath the objective. I invite you to the dual presence of specimens. How do you bring warmth to these cold bodies with anything but our own consciousness?”

Xan studied Paleontology at the University of Montana for three years before switching to Studio Art and Museum Studies as a major. It was here that the synergies between the worlds of art and science collided for him. He received his MFA from Tufts last year, finishing with an acclaimed thesis and painting exhibit, Trace Fossils. He is part of a growing population of artists that have a strong interest in the sciences, especially biology and ecology, who are making art with a transdisciplinary approach and through a scientific lens. This is perhaps a result of the growing global awareness of the impending changes to our human experience and existence in the face of the climate crisis. Art focusing on extinction and diminishing species has taken on a new importance in activist and environmental movements, as well as developing a burgeoning presence in the art world.

Xan’s aim is to merge the Museum of Natural History and the Museum of Fine Art. He recognizes and respects both institutions’ drive to find sense in a complex and entropic world, to explain our human histories in a way that contextualizes our present. But, he also strives to dismantle myopic institutional storytelling and false hierarchies in both that oversimplify stories too vast to fully tell.

Why Look? will be on view at D’Arcy Simpson Art Works in Hudson NY March 25 – April 30th.

Archives

Leave A Comment

For security, use of Google's reCAPTCHA service is required which is subject to the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.

Go to Top