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AUTOMAT Collective Presents: A Sliver of the Moon, A Single Branch of Flowering Plum
April 11 @ 6:00 pm - May 4 @ 5:00 pm
AUTOMAT
1400 N American St. #105
Philadelphia,
PA
19122
United States
AUTOMAT Collective is excited to present A Sliver of the Moon, A Single Branch of Flowering Plum, a solo show featuring Natali Rodrigues, curated by Brynn Hurlstone.
Join us Thursday, April 11, from 6-9pm for the opening reception at the gallery located in the Crane Arts building at 1400 N. American St. The show will be on view from April 11th – May 4th, 2024, with viewing hours Saturdays 12-5pm.
The singular, the monumental, the infinite and infinitesimal. To be in the presence of a confluence of seemingly opposing states is precisely the point. A Sliver of the Moon, a Single Branch of Flowering Plum shows us that stillness and chaos are in fact, the same. Stillness is merely chaos so perfectly tuned that it makes not a sound; chaos is the hive in which stillness may defend its outline. In her heavily researched, multitudinous quest for the contradictory push and pull at the center of being, Natali Rodrigues has found this glowing ember of truth. A Sliver of the Moon vibrates with the intensity of her desire to share it. Transmuting this knowledge into gestural dynamics that become, rather than behold, Rodrigues invites us into ourselves without pretext. By accepting, we step into a world of refraction, distillation, excessive textural noise, and quiet, blessed quiet, amongst the frenzied dance of life. In this carefully constructed tableau of liminal spaces, we may contemplate that every moment, every cell, every person on earth is both everything and nothing. Oneness. That is all there ever was, and all there ever will be. In her upcoming solo show at AUTOMAT, Natali Rodrigues offers us this grace.
Natali Rodrigues is an Associate Professor in the Glass Program at the Alberta University of the Arts in Canada. Her research investigates the experience of liminal space and transformative experience, which finds voice through two distinct making practices: drawing and glass. Her working methodology moves between a meditative making practice and one that is profoundly physical. Her work is an attempt to create a system of cartography of liminal space, where what is marked is not in reference to the physical but rather the transformative.