
Art
Review: Laura Splan
by Alison Bing
SF Chronicle, March 13,2005
special to SF Gate
Medical
technology is what we make of it in Laura Splan's otherworldly drawings of implants that have been rejected and artfully repurposed. She composes
and scans images of medical devices, then draws over them with a fine-nibbed
pen, using her own blood as ink. In one delicate image, piles of discarded
breast implants seem to have taken the place of decorative pebbles in an
aquarium, sprouting reedlike filaments that sway as elegantly as algae in
a crosscurrent. In this image, the true decorative potential of breast implants
is fully realized, and for once they don't look the least bit grotesque.
Far more sinister is Splan's image of surgical screws that look like medieval
torture implements, dangling from what could be either frayed ropes or frayed
nerves -- maybe this is what passes for a carnival game in hell. "Bone
plates #1" seems to belong on the opposite end of the spiritual spectrum,
offering a rare glimpse into the infinite. This ethereal drawing could be
a contemplative mandala or a glorious rosette cathedral window, composed
of all-seeing eyes that are sections of artificial bone with gaps in the
middle for marrow. Splan balances corporeal and incorporeal, wondrous and
weird; her take on a bone mill makes the high-tech device look like a primitive
sausage factory, with strands feeding through the grating of the mill and
into a cup. Splan's show gives several new meanings to the phrase "anatomically
correct"; the implants correct our own malfunctioning parts, and she
corrects the implants with her own anatomy. But her show at the all-female,
all-the-time Femina Potens Gallery also corrects another anatomical issue:
the overwhelming XY factor of the art world, where strong solo shows by
women artists such as this one are too often presented only during Women's
History Month.