Sara Garden Armstrong is an American artist known for her work in digital/electronic multimedia and artist's books. Armstrong creates sculptures, paintings, drawings (from miniature to wall size), artist's books, multimedia artworks involving computers sound and light, and constructs permanent installations in atrium spaces.
Armstrong's early period with the exploration of sound had exhibitions at the Visual Arts Gallery at UAB and the Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, Alabama. Her first exhibition in New York City was at PS1 in 1982, "'the Sound Corridor'" curated by William Hellermen. This installation began her multimedia series of work entitled "'Airplayer'" which ended in 1992 at the CB's 313 Gallery and Bar (next door to CBGB) on the Bowery with "'Airplayer XIV'" – both installations utilized mechanisms for movement and sound.
"In the Airplayer series of Sara Garden Armstrong, one can observe a growing mastery of multifaceted media and the inclusion of increasingly sophisticated technologies. Large hand-made paper forms, hoses, blower boxes and sound are elements in the language she uses, always articulated within the parameters of a given installation space. In her later works, one can see a shift from mechanical to electronic controls of the air sounds-reminiscent of sea and wind-and an increase in the artist's mix of "real" and digital. Wire mesh and paper forms have become powerful humanoid shapes and, when combined with movement and sound, suggest the basic mechanisms of life support and human functions. The artist does not hesitate to seek collaboration with technical specialists and in so doing has accelerated the development of her art. -Anna Campbell Bliss, "Explorers", LEONARDO, Vol.28, No. 4, pp. 239–242, 1994
"Sara Garden Armstrong utilizes the effects of ocean tides to show us contour in the waters edge, a graceful play of the ebb and flow of the universe itself and in disparate areas in our own lives." -Jon Coffelt for "'Contour: The Definitive Line,'" Schedler Minchin Gallery, Birmingham AL
"When Art meets Technology and the marriage works, the magic can hardly be contained. So we have in Airplayers by Sara Garden Armstrong a remarkable translation of a large sculptural environment into a book, a video, and a reduced-in-scale sculptural environment housed in a handcrafted box." -Judith Hoffberg, HIGH PERFORMANCE Airplayers: A New Book Form Born of Technology
Utilizing the notion of the trace, as a visual indication of the passing of time, these wall-sized works engage the viewer in a subtle contemplation; whereby the past and the present seem to share the same moment." -Michael Macinnis, 'The New York Art World, M, June/August 1999
In 1995 The Book and Beyond, curated by Douglas Dodds, National Art Library at the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, England
In 1996 Stiftung für Konkrete Kunst, Reutlingen, Germany
In 1998 Art and Technology, Bellevue Art Museum, WA
In 1999, "'Marking Time, Large Scale Drawing, Sara Garden Armstrong,'" was covered extensively. Among the various revues were The New Yorker,[8] The New York Art World, M[9] and Internet ArtResources.[10] This exhibition was curated by Grady T. Turner and included a catalogue.
In 2006, Armstrong's work was part of "Contour: The Definitive Line" curated by Jon Coffelt. One of 17 artists who were asked to define the concept of contour, the exhibit was the culmination of this subjective approach.[11] This exhibition also included "Clayton Colvin, Travis Childers, Lee Isaacs and Sean Slemon. James Nelson comments on Armstrong's work in The Birmingham News on June 18, 2006.
In 2008, Armstrong was selected and curated by Miranda McClintic for 41 Park' "Sara Garden Armstrong: distant views: works on paper." There was a catalogue included with this exhibition
"'Airplayer Book,'" New York: Willis, Locker, & Owens, 1990; 21x15 cm, edition of 1,000. ISBN0-930279-17-4
"'Airplayers: MULTIPLE,'" New York: Willis, Locker & Owens, 1990; 28 x 33 x 14 cm, edition of 65 variable copies; signed and numbered
"'Fragile Connections,'" New York, 1992; 28 x 11.5 cm, edition of 200 variable copies, signed and numbered
"'Messages from Home,'" New York, 1994; 23 x 29 cm, edition of 40 variable copies, signed & numbered
"'Interiors.'" New York, 1997; 10 x 32 cm, edition of 25 variable copies, signed & numbered
"'Shadow Presences,'" New York, 2010, edition of 20 copies, signed & numbered
Collections
Armstrong's work is included in collections nationally and internationally among them Victoria and Albert Museum in London, UK, MoMA[12][13] in New York City, WAAND "Women Artists Archives National Directory, Ira Silverberg Papers, Sun and Moon Press Archive, Sackner Archive of Visual and Concrete Poetry.
Bibliography
Popper, Frank, "Art of the Electronic Age," Harry N. Abrams, 1993, ISBN0-8109-1928-1
References
^Southern Accents, May/June 1987, Volume Ten, Number Three
^"Galleries Downtown", The New Yorker, June 21 & 28, 1999 (Gibson Gallery)
^Macinnis, Michael, 'The New York Art World, M,' June/August 1999 (Gibson Gallery)