Melissa Vandenberg
I like the way you prey. I like your fury. I like your precious things.
Elwyn Brooks White says of Thoreau’s self-imposed exile into the forest…"Henry went forth to battle when he took to the woods, and Walden is the report of a man torn by two powerful and opposing drives—the desire to enjoy the world and the urge to set the world straight."
I like the way you prey is born of both fury and confusion in what is worshiped and elevated to commemoration. I am not alone in the feeling of being torn between “two powerful and opposing drives.” As a self-professed civil species, we are full of rage and hypocrisy. Our hypothetical exceptionalism, a notion spearheaded by the West, the white, and the masculine is eroding our human(e) potential. What are morals, faith, and veneration without empathy, love, and gentleness? I like the way you prey is an artist’s attempt to make sense of an anxious and busted world through materiality and iconographies (icons) of reverence.
Our morals are distilled in our monuments. The ways in which we offer tribute to the fallen reveal voids in the system. The “fallen” here refers to a spectrum of loss… lost children to gun violence, loss of bodily autonomy, lost faith, and a debunked American dream. Secondhand gravestones and urns, triangular flag frames, castoff US ensigns, and other soft media are combined with children’s toys, matchbooks, and domicile objects as a series of novel cenotaphs. These turncoat tributes flux between collage and assemblage, feeling ephemeral and somewhat mocking. The work pokes at fears that govern all of us—fear of death, fear of being forgotten, and perhaps the most common, fear of losing power.
Melissa Vandenberg
Love... love will tear US apart again
2023
North Georgia Blue Ridge Mountain Region marble
as installed approx. 21.5 by 69 by 23 in. (ca. 54,6 by 175,3 by 58,4 cm)
Vandenberg's studio practice explores the political landscape using national identity, folk art, ancestry, immigration and the perception of a homeland as points of departure. She gravitates to everyday materials like matches, fabric, stickers, wood, temporary tattoos and found objects. Born and educated in Detroit, Melissa Vandenberg is a multidisciplinary artist, educator and curator living and working in Richmond, KY where she is an Associate Professor of Art at Eastern Kentucky University and Director of the University's Giles Gallery. Repetition is a motif central to Vandenberg's production. Recalling Gilles Deleuze's pronouncement that only that which is alike differs, and only differences are alike, Vandenberg inserts selected symbols, such as stars or stripes, and certain texts, such as the word PATRIOT, within many of her works.
It is almost as if Vandenberg has taken the negative space created by removing the term from the former and layered it over the latter creating an oscillating relationship between these two series.
It is this type of subtle understandings of the ways in which an artist can move within and between media that makes Vandenberg's long history as a practitioner evident. Rather than be trapped within the confines of a medium for fear of stepping outside it, she is as comfortable within one as she is within another. She also revisits methods, but reinterprets their meanings. Drawing on the matchstick drawing methods of her 1998 Untitled (Match Drawing Series) works, Vandenberg is now producing new pieces which scorch paper, but she has turned towards the figurative, using many of the same icons that appear in her collages and three-dimensional works.
Melissa Vandenberg
EX*PAT*RIOT
2016
match burns on Arches paper
approx. 27.5 by 29.5 in. (ca. 70 by 75 cm)
"To understand Melissa Vandenberg's public-facing finished work, it's crucial to understand the private aspects of her compositional process. Several months ago, the artist sent me video documentation of her burn-drawing process, filmed from a tripod in the corner of her studio. In the center of the frame, Vandenberg had laid out the second panel of her drawing Glory Days on a work table. Matches comprising the lower half of the letter "e" were lined up neatly, side by side, their sticks fanning out. The scene was not precious; behind the work table were studio odds and ends, including Tupperware containers and a tote bag. Once she lit the match, however, the visual noise, the humdrum of the studio, faded away. Watching the footage, it's impossible to not be captivated by the meditative spectacle of the row of matches aflame. The burning went fast, and after a few seconds, Vandenberg's hand reached into the frame to extinguish the matches. Like a bodily afterimage, her red hair peeked into the lower corner of the frame as she leaned forward to examine her work.
The whole video clocks in at one minute. Still, the footage gives a sense of the push-and-pull of Vandenberg's process, an oscillation between the careful plotting of her drawings and the chance act of burning. If one of her burns, which she also calls "brands," goes awry, the whole work must be started over again. Each attempt, then, is a leap of faith, the work a ritual with an almost spiritual sense of commitment.
The finished Glory Days illustrates the words "glory daze," rendered through burns in a lowercase cursive font. When mounted, the tail from the "y" in glory and the "d" in daze align but do not touch, separated as they are over two sheets of paper with a small gap between them. The near touch brings a host of associations to mind, from the art-historical - Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel fresco The Creation of Adam - to the metaphorical, fractious political divisions in the U.S. (...) "
- Wendy Vogel
excerpt of Incendiary Motives by Wendy Vogel, published in Vandenberg's 2022 monograph smoke 'em if you got 'em
Exhibitions
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MELISSA VANDENBERG: I LIKE THE WAY YOU PREY
August 25 - October 14, 2023
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CAPITOLISM
January 20 - April 24, 2021
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NIGHT IN AMERICA
September 23 - December 11, 2020
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MELISSA VANDENBERG: SMOKE 'EM IF YOU GOT 'EM
January 18 - March 1, 2019
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KILL SWITCH
May 5 - July 29, 2017
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MELISSA VANDENBERG: S.O.S.
January 7 - February 14, 2014
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PULP 3: WORK ON PAPER | WORK WITH PAPER
August 9 - September 7, 2013
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WELCOME TO SIX FLAGS
March 16 - May 18, 2012
Publications
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SMOKE 'EM IF YOU GOT 'EM
published by Maus Contemporary
september 2022
with texts by Wendy Vogel, Zachary Small, and Anna Viola Hallberg
12 by 9.6 inches (ca. 30,7 by 23,7 cm)hardcover, 428 pages, full color
isbn: 978-0-9988397-1-4