Works
Biography

"It is in the end all about 'seeing'; looking not at the centre of a thing but at the peripherals, the edges, and sometimes not looking at 'it' at all, but at everything around it. Knowing that what I see today may not be what I see tomorrow. Not because the object has changed but because I have. It is also about where in the transition from 'all too familiar' to 'this is my world' do I engage with the people, places, and objects that make up my life. I use familiar shapes that need closer inspection and time. I don't try to say 'this is how it is' but rather ask 'how could it be?' Some of my newest work deals with 'void, hole, 'emptiness, as passageway or view to 'other'. Within this is the use of a confessional motif as a nod toward the idea of confession as story, as marker of event/time. People as well as objects contain these 'markers' and they serve to alter our perceptions of the world around us. If we accept the idea that we view the world through a series of ever developing and morphing filters then each perceptual event will have a bearing on any subsequent events. We can not view the world outside of these events just as we can not remove the 'trace' or shadow, if you will, of our memories of specific moments. The screen serves as a metaphor for the conscious divide that allows us to function while still having access to the necessary memory of the myriad of life events. I use the confessional motif specifically because it is one laden with separateness; both from one another and from ourselves. I choose to explore the feeling that we are connected to our past selves and others as well as the physical."

 

- Brian Usher

Brian Usher has been exploring the physical and emotional power of space with his artwork for almost two decades. His early work focused on the direct relationship between the object and the viewer / user. Because many of those pieces were vessels of some kind, Brian found that they leant themselves to the interplay of interior and exterior spaces. As this exploration of physical space developed, Brian found that working in glass gave him greater freedom to express these new ideas. His goal is to use the pieces to create a space, both physical and emotional, which provokes the viewer to confront and consider the interplay of opposing ideas - strength versus fragility, stasis versus change, surface versus depth, light versus darkness - and to wonder about the possibilities of transformation. In this focus on the emotional response to his non-representational pieces, Brian's work can be understood within the traditions of Abstract Expressionism, blended with the minimalist sculptural tendencies and graphic expression of Czech masters.

Exhibitions