David Packer (artist)
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David Packer is a New York based artist who works in a variety of media: sculpture, drawing, and artist books. The subject matter is that of the everyday: vehicles, plastic water bottles, car engines, dogs, bears, and other animals that come from different areas of interest: technology, industry, and the natural world. “He cleverly manipulates prevailing contemporary ideology to grand effect, making aesthetically pleasing art with socially critical impact.”


Content and media

Packer’s process includes distinct and different, but all inter-related, media, beginning with an enormous collection of photographic images, both analog and digital. As he notes, “My process now is much more image based, in terms of what I will see in an object, if I find an object with resonance, with a depth of meaning.” The resonance, that informs the content of all the work, regardless of media, may include “industry, corporations, how the land is being used, how corporations are taking stuff from the land.” Large scale, serial works on paper, including mixed media collages, drawings, and highly detailed plans are “patiently and methodically constructed with mechanical precision” and “beautifully conceived and meticulously drawn.” These drawings are crucial to the design and construction of the ensuing sculptures as well as functioning at the same time as independent works of art. The artist books that Packer has made, some unique, some collaged, and some limited edition, parallel the work on paper. As a sculptor, Packer works primarily in ceramics, and has been described “as a master practitioner of architectural and technical ceramics”; however, he also has used found lumber and discarded industrial metal, highlighting his “investigation of the visual qualities of old and new technologies,” often with “redundant technology imaging redundant industry.” The themes that are important to the artist—industry, technology, nature and humankind’s relationship to these issues—find full form in the sculptures that include rusty metal trucks, dancing bears, Vietnam-era helicopters, and malarial mosquitoes. Even though “illuminating ecological conditions is no mean accomplishment,” Packer’s work has a strong element of warning, like other “future-conscious artists and creative thinkers”—an awareness of the existence of the “post-industrial moment, a post-industrial vacuum, where not even the cleaners are working.” The ceramic sculpture ''Bears that Dance'' is a direct example of warning, with two white polar bears linked together in some ill-defined and strange symbiotic human like relationship. Ultimately Packer “allows his work to become that which it calls into question: namely the rational over the natural.”


Exhibitions and residencies

Since 1983, Packer has exhibited both nationally and internationally, with over 15 one-person shows and over 50 group shows. Two notable exhibitions in New York City are a one person show at Garth Clark Gallery in 2002, where he also had three other group shows, and participation in the group show, Exit Biennial II, Traffic, at Exit Art, 2005, curated by
Papo Colo Papo Colo (born August 12, 1946) is a Puerto Rican performance artist, painter, writer, and curator. He was born in San Juan, Puerto Rico. He lives and works in New York City and in El Yunque rainforest in Puerto Rico. Papo Colo is an interdiscipl ...
and Jeanette Ingberman. In 2006, a three-month residency at the Kohler Arts/Industry program allowed the artist to realize a significant and ambitious project: full-size cast ceramic sculptures of V8 car engines. This work, called ''The Last of the V8s'', was both more complex and more ambitious than anything he had tried before. In Packer’s own words: “I never thought how appropriate it would be to manufacture a quintessentially American industrial object in a factory setting.” These sculptures were also included in the show The Moment at Hand at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, as well as subsequently in galleries in New York, Chicago, and Seattle. The predominant use of industrial imagery in such projects and “the never-ending, osmotic flow that underwrites cultural exchange” creates in Packer’s work “a 21st Century elegy for American industrial might” where “the dominant note becomes poignancy.” Described as an artist “not unaccustomed to functioning outside of his element,” Packer has also shown overseas, often as part of an extended stay at an international residency. This includes three one person shows in Morocco, two in 2012, in Rabat at LeCube Independent Art Room and in Fez as part of the Fez Sacred Music Festival, and in 2019 at Jardin Anima, Marrakech. He has also shown in Tokyo, during a residency at Youkobu Artist in Residence, as well as in Vallauris, France, with a show called Pèlerinage. Other residencies include MacDowell,
Yaddo Yaddo is an artists' community located on a estate in Saratoga Springs, New York. Its mission is "to nurture the creative process by providing an opportunity for artists to work without interruption in a supportive environment.". On March  ...
, and
Virginia Center for the Creative Arts The Virginia Center for the Creative Arts (VCCA) is a residential artist community in Amherst, Virginia, USA. Since 1971, VCCA has offered residencies of varying lengths with flexible scheduling for international artists, writers, and composers at ...
.


Collections and curating

Packer’s work is included in the public collections of the
Carnegie Museum of Art The Carnegie Museum of Art, is an art museum in the Oakland neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Originally known as the Department of Fine Arts, Carnegie Institute and was at what is now the Main Branch of the Carnegie Library of Pittsbur ...
, the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, and the
Museum of Art and Design The Museum of Arts and Design (MAD), based in Manhattan, New York City, collects, displays, and interprets objects that document contemporary and historic innovation in craft, art, and design. In its exhibitions and educational programs, the mus ...
. Private collections include those of Sonny Kamm,
Kate Shepherd Kate Shepherd (born in 1961) is an American artist based in New York City. Education Shepherd completed her B.A. from Oberlin College, Oberlin, Ohio, in 1982. She studied briefly at the Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies, New York ...
, Nawal Slaoui, and
Jack Zipes Jack David Zipes (born June 7, 1937) is a professor emeritus of German, comparative literature, and cultural studies, who has published and lectured on German literature, critical theory, German Jewish culture, children's literature, and folklore. ...
. Between 2015 and 2018, Packer curated three exhibitions at Spring/Break Art Show.


Travel and other projects

Traveling, both for its own sake or as an artist, is an important part of Packer’s practice. He has visited four continents: some countries visited include Australia, Belgium, Cambodia, France, Greece, India, Mexico, Spain, Syria, and Thailand. The first time Packer was a Fulbright Scholar to Morocco, in Fez in 2011, after three exhibitions of his own work there, he wrote a book on the diversity of Moroccan ceramics. The Earth has Three Colors: a celebration of Moroccan ceramics is the first full-length publication to provide a comprehensive overview of the ceramics of Morocco; this hardbound edition, with 280 pages and ten chapters, written in English with a French translation, was published in 2019 by Mazda Publishers. That same year, he received a Core Fulbright Scholar award to Morocco to continue research and promote his book. Since the book was published, including a successful crowdfunding campaign, Packer has given numerous lectures, including Greenwich House Pottery in the United States, and the
American Legation, Tangier The Tangier American Legation ( ar, المفوضية الأميركية في طنجة; french: Légation américaine de Tanger), officially the Tangier American Legation Institute for Moroccan Studies (TALIMS), is a building in the ''medina'' of ...
and the Villa des Arts, Rabat in Morocco.


Biography, education, and teaching

Packer was born in
Amersham Amersham ( ) is a market town and civil parish within the unitary authority of Buckinghamshire, England, in the Chiltern Hills, northwest of central London, from Aylesbury and from High Wycombe. Amersham is part of the London commuter belt. ...
, England in 1960 and has lived in the United States since 1983, including Washington DC, Miami, Tallahassee and, since 1994, New York City. He is a dual British and American citizen and currently maintains a studio in
Long Island City Long Island City (LIC) is a residential and commercial neighborhood on the extreme western tip of Queens, a borough in New York City. It is bordered by Astoria to the north; the East River to the west; New Calvary Cemetery in Sunnyside to the ...
. Art school in the United Kingdom included Buckinghamshire New University, Buckinghamshire College of Further Education (1979–80) and University of the West of England, Bristol#Bower Ashton Studios, Bristol School of Art (1980-83) where Packer received a BFA in ceramics. He finished his formal education in the United States at Florida State University, graduating with an MFA in Studio Art in 1994. Packer has taught ceramics, including tile making and wheel throwing, drawing, and computer art: schools include Greenwich House Pottery, the Crafts Students League, both in New York City, and Western Carolina University, including the graduate program. Packer met his wife, artist Margaret Lanzetta, at Exit Art in 1995.


References


External links


Official Website
{{DEFAULTSORT:Packer, David 1960 births Living people People from Amersham