Inside & Outside the Frame: in A Dream About My Garden Without the Smell of Dirt
A Dream About My Garden Without the Smell of Dirt at Front/Space is an installation that
reads like a book who’s title quickly draws you in between its covers. Artist, educator and
organizer Megan Pobywajlo writes of her concerns with having her first solo show in her
booklet of text that accompanies the show. Is it too self indulgent and limiting? Who is not
exhibited? Who will never cross the threshold? Pobywajlo extended the walls of the gallery
in a gesture influenced by the late photographer Luigi Ghirri who wrote that “in photography
the deletion of the space that surrounds the framed image is as important as what is
represented”. She places her inkjet sticker prints on the windows facing out to include what
surrounds the physical frame of the space. Viewing the photos on the outside of the building
we must also consider what they do not contain – the “real”: the reflections of cars and
people walking by, the Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts building, the Crossroads
district, the Midwest….
Expanding the ideas of her 2017 installation at La Esquina, “PROTO-CHICKEN ON SOFTBOILED”,
she imagined Front/Space as a book, “A spine and two windows spread, a cover:
a view from outside in, a curve: a turning page.” The large scaled public images in the
windows invite you to turn the page and enter a colorful personal narrative space composed
of two framed photos on the walls (framed by larger rectangles of painted color behind
them), arrangements of organic and inanimate objects and three accordion photo books
displayed on pedestals of varying heights and colors. The space becomes even more
intimate with the inclusion of two small booklets of text. Within Texts (still images) are brief
assemblages of words and phrases, like shots in a film, about her art, Notes for Cartier-
Bresson and past and present tales of her family to which we provide our own imagined
photos to fill in an unseen family album.
It is uncertain what predictions Pobywajlo says these still life photographs are making but
there is great pleasure taken from their assembled contents of both the real and artificial. We
gaze upon them like objects of desire seduced by a photographic style predominantly seen
in and exploited by advertising. Pobywajlo speaks of her approach as “commingling” her
own voracity for her subject with that of the viewer’s: “Photographing food (fresh or artificial)
has become more cathartic than I could have anticipated. I can find a loving kind of humor in
it, and share some recognition that what we eat is inextricably linked to the spaces we
occupy in the world. Food is never silent”.
In the Growing Pitcher we see the greens of peppers and cucumbers filling a vintage clear
Lucite mid-century pitcher whose architectural shape and construction are equal to the
nuances of the organic forms within. The use of the pepper as a subject recalls the sensual
Edward Weston photos of the 1920’s that he said were, “to make the commonplace
unusual”. Pobywajlo also brings this democratic approach to her forms but by humorously
packing the organic within the geometry of the pitcher, as it counteracts any further romantic
comparison. However, because her photos are such acutely composed tableaus, they can
also be linked in subject to past Dutch still life painters of the 17 th & 18th c. despite their
more symbolic interpretation of subjects emphasizing the transience of life, the vanitas of a
decomposing fruit or a skull. A more closely aligned contemporary comparison can be made
with the photographer and bookmaker Ruth van Beek and her collaged flower arrangement
still-lifes. They both share an unexpected recontextualizing of objects that is consistently
inventive.
Robert Adams writes in his book Beauty in Photography, that photographers love gardens
because they are “strikingly like landscape pictures, sanctuaries not from but of truth”.
Pobywajlo shows a great affection for her assembled refuges of collected objects that she
writes contain, “optimistic views of the future”. Much like how a Japanese garden is re-set
from found stones, lanterns and plants, Pobywajlo’s still-lifes are composed of elements
reassembled from disparate times and places. Upon amber, mustard, azure, emerald, coral
and crimson painted walls and pedestals are balanced eggplants, green tomatoes, squash,
carrots, roses and leaves that appear to fit naturally together
Strawberry Air is composed of five objects. A vibrant red plastic porcupine hedge ball on the
right is balanced by a single luscious red strawberry on the left. Between them sits a
bookend composed of sensually curved clear Lucite pieces in soft focus and ambiguous
scale that blends into the yellow & grey split background. Next to it is an organically shaped
burnt orange glass vase that holds a red abita air plant whose flat leaves curve and echo its
shape. It is a prestidigitation without technical wizardry, an elegant formal composition of
colorful playfulness as vibrant as any contemporary work.
Pobywajlo continues to tend, change, and grow new compositions within the Front/Space
interior over the duration of the show to negate the normal stasis of a gallery installation. In
this way the space remains as she first envisioned it, like a book that you would want to visit
again and again. It reiterates what she wrote is “a search for knowledge” that considers both
what’s inside and outside the frame of the gallery–within her deep family roots and without in
our current collective image environment.
A Dream About My Garden…Without the Smell of Dirt
was on view at Front/Space through July 28th 2018 by appointment and open to the public
2-5 p.m. followed by a potluck 6-8 p.m on Saturday. For more information on the exhibition,
email 18th.frontspace@gmail.com