In The Nanopresent. Injeyan's new works dwell on the moment when we are leaving the past and entering the future. Acrylic on canvas, with small sets of pencil drawings on paper and digitally-created prints.
If art is the visual presentation of the ineffable, then there must be moments
when language denies us a word to describe art. Injeyan’s new works dwell on the
moment when we are leaving the past and entering the future. This slice of time
that we call the present is experienced only as a transition. To Injeyan, it is
captured in the auto rear-view mirror. The mirror gives us the receding glimpse
of the past, and over its forward rim presents us with the comings-ahead. This
“nanopresent,” (a word coined by Injeyan) is the time in which the departing
images have reflected from the mirror and meet our eye, a distance of about a
foot, taking one billionth of a second (nanosecond). This interval mediates the
past as one moves into the future.
Injeyan’s new work “In the Nanopresent” is mostly acrylic on canvas, with small
sets of pencil drawings on paper and digitally-created prints. Accurate highway
and mirror renderings give both the past and forward views. The image inversions
are at times improbable: the past can be a receding planetary system, and the
future a terrestrial mountain chain. Or the past is a quiet urban scene, and the
future an abstract void, the prima materia. The series utilizes past themes of
the highway from Injeyan’s “Dynamo Road” series. Imagery centered about the
Hollywood sign bespeaks of the grand illusion of Hollywood that has assumed a
parallel reality in our lives. The present paintings are continuations of the
theme of movement along the Tao, but they now involve the idea of elapsed time as
well as of space. There is a polarity between realistic renderings and abstract
scenes. The contrasts are thought-provoking and harmonious. They are meant to
hold us in the present, at
least until the scene changes a nanosecond later.
Opening reception: November 16Th, 7p.m.-10p.m.
Harvest Gallery
938 N. Brand Blvd. - Glendale
Gallery hours are Tuesday-Sunday from 11:00am to 7:00pm.
Free admission