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biography

The collages are of intimate scale. They are intuitive, accretions of dense, mesmerizing, stimulated fields of meticulously cut paper sourced from archaic books.

I initiate my process with a ground of subtly variegated paper building layer upon layer of intricately contoured fragments. Fragments found sifting through all kinds of outmoded textbooks, encyclopedias, leather fillers, tomes on the natural sciences, medical instruction, technical manuals and the like. The intriguing, enigmatic accrue in orderly accretion. Lyric improvisations from the natural biological world intersect with scientific and mechanical elements evoking otherworldly tableaus, suggestive of the macro- and microcosmos. Schematics, diagrams, cross-sections, wings of a butterfly, engines, structures, scaffolding, scientific apparatus, bodily organs, planetary orbs, geodes, bones, leaves, shells—combine to reshape­. Deconstructed excisions cut to abstraction, linear, tone, and texture accumulate—each addition determines that which follows in continuous rhythmic flow. Recontextualized, formed with immediacy, and imbued with timelessness.

Selections are made with a practiced eye—finding inspiration in antiquated printing aberrations, odd or inartful renderings, and engraved optical eccentricities. I began acquiring old, discarded volumes long before their possibilities unfolded, attracted by the visual beauty and richness, by the soft warmth of the patina, and by the fragility inherent to this arcane printed matter—its evocative obsolescence. Qualities that resonate of another age—an authenticity—that I desire to preserve and channel.

In 2004 and 2007, I was the recipient of Pollock-Krasner Foundation grants. My work is in the collection of The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston (mfa), The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), The Crocker Art Museum Sacramento in many private collections, and has been presented at numerous events: The ADAA Art Show, Palm Springs Fine Art Fair, Houston Fine Art Fair, CA Boom–Dwell on Design Los Angeles, Pulse Art Fair (Miami and New York), LA Art Show, Works on Paper–The Park Avenue Armory.

Mentions:

Derek Owens [Professor, St. John’s University] writes “Maritta Tapanainen gets her source material from vintage medical volumes, botanical encyclopedias, and technical manuals, and her process is as meticulous as that of any collagist: the textbook illustrations are carefully pulled from their homes and layered on a grid of vintage papers (a method not just meticulous, but mysterious—how she preserves the integrity of these tiny, intricate pieces is hard to fathom).

But these are more than just masterful depictions of imaginal universes. Blunt as it might sound, the care and detail of this work points to what might simply be described as love. A powerful love for the physical universe; a love for the elegant, fragile detail.” —Vices Peculiar to These Eclectics: Contemporary Collage exhibition catalog, 2015.

Peter Frank [art writer] writes “Tapanainen has long woven dense mats of disparate but similarly textured depictions, providing them just enough space to suggest galaxies or fossil beds or views into microscopic worlds teeming with nervously elegant protozoa.” —Pavel Zoubok Gallery, Morphology exhibition catalog, 2008.

Stuart Denenberg [art dealer] likens experiencing to a diatomaceously scaled world, observing “Tapanainen is orchestrating new music; she is in control of a magical nanosphere; in these works we are gently allowed to join the dance.” —Couturier Gallery, From There to Here, Collage 1992–2007, exhibition catalog 2007, “Protozoan Poetics”.

Toronto-based multi-media artist Margie Kelk takes an exploratory and experimental approach as she appropriates and reconstructs visual fragments of ideas through diverse media that include ceramic, bronze and aluminium sculpture, animation, drawing, painting and digital applications.

Half of Everything (2020), a flm by Margie Kelk and Lynne Slater with music by Ian Kelk, premiered at the Red Head Gallery in 2020 has been screened in many flm festivals internationally, including the Tagore International Film Festival, held at the Gitanjali Cultural Complex, Prabhat Sarani, Bolpur, West Bengal, India.

UnderSee (2018), an animated flm co-directed by Margie Kelk and Lynne Slater, has been featured in over ninety flm festivals nationally and internationally, including the Philip K. Dick Science Fiction Film Festival, Orange County Museum of Art, Santa Ana, California, USA; Beyond the Curve International Film Festival, Hôtel Paris Lafayette, Paris, France; the Portugal International Film Festival at the Pestana Palacio do Freixo, Porto, Portugal, and the International Shorts Film Festival, Melbourne, Australia.

Margie Kelk’s frst award-winning stop-motion animated flm, Substratae (2015) has been featured in close to one-hundred festivals nationally and internationally, including The New Renaissance Film Festival, London, UK; and the New York State International Film Festival, in Albany, New York.

Recent exhibitions include In: FLUX at the Red Head Gallery, Toronto. A virtual 3D tour of IN: Flux is available on Kelk’s website. Her work has been featured in numerous literary and visual arts publications, including Te Adroit Journal, Te Scrivener Creative Review, Blouin Artinfo, and Canadian Art Magazine. Upcoming commissioning projects include artwork for the PhoeNX Ensemble's Jade Emperor and the Great Race Project.

Margie Kelk completed courses in drawing and painting at the Toronto School of Art. Kelk is a graduate of Wellesley College, and the Johns Hopkins University (PhD.)