Vera Scekic of Racine, Wis., recently displayed “Synthetic Being,” at the Contemporary Art Center of Peoria. Moderately sized paintings, full of forms reminiscent of petri dishes repeat across colored surfaces, recalling the ringed expressions of laboratory tables, investigations of cell-like blooms and abutted shapes. One feels the potential of burgeoning life forms not identified beyond the cellular matrix. Are we witnessing organic and natural, grown and cultivated, planned and designed or found and uncovered?
Scekic’s work is all of the above. Although the surface is not actually moldy and deformed, her approach explores that kind of growth. Avoiding the painterly expressiveness of drips and spontaneous overlaid materiality that Expressionism purports, Scekic remains firmly in contact with that spirit. She pairs delicate explorations within an even-tempered approach. What could become a chaotic mess of interactions resolves into a serene sense of controlled composition, surface and structure.
‘Mapping Contours, Granny Smith Green’ by Vera Scekic
The maker here, Vera Scekic is in charge of subject and object although we are not given the actual substance or context of the image beyond it’s true identity as paint. She works within a grid, cross referencing through color, similarity, and difference amidst intimately cultivated shape. The sense of other, of the studied and contained persists. She offers the sense of wonder of the micro universe as contemporary painting practice.
‘Mapping Contours, Paynes Gray’ by Vera Scekic