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Terry Haggerty
Two Minds (2009)
Acrylic on wall
Approximately 21 feet by 126 feet
Located in Main Concourse, NE Concession Area
As its title, Two Minds (2009), suggests, Terry Haggerty's painting
is conflicted. On one hand, it presents a system that fuses crisp
visual punch with consistent, all-over evenness. On the other,
it insists that the quirks provided by unexpected interruptions
make art and life both interesting and unpredictable, at once
puzzling and fun.
It is impossible to look at Haggerty's mural without your eyes
instantly gliding along its wavy bands of color. From one end
to the other, we visually travel speedily along the candy canecolored
curves - as if on a rollercoaster ride. Brightly striped
awnings come to mind, as do banners flapping in the wind,
garments in Baroque paintings, and 1960s Op Art.
Haggerty's painting creates the illusion of three-dimensional
space by suggesting that some sections recede into the distance
and disappear behind other sections. The mind's eye fills in what
is not visible, creating a coherent image. And this is where the
London-born, Berlin-based artist throws a monkeywrench into
the system.
It is physically impossible for the red and white stripes to curve up
and over the "fold" or the "bump" in the upper middle part of the
painting. There is simply no way for the stripes to be continuous,
unbroken bands. But that is what the mind's eye wants to see
and what our eyes tell us, when carried away by the painting's
visual momentum. And that is exactly what Haggerty wants - a
glitch in the system that allows us to be of two minds.
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