Bio and images
Though Batty might be called a "jack-of-all-trades, she is
truly the master several and glass is one. A winter, 2003
Resident Fellow at the Creative Glass Center of America, the
Canadian artist does not regard herself as primarily a "glass
person." She paints with encaustic on wood, studied film and
is a professional photographer. She has worked in Hollywood,
and more important from the glass perspective, as a staff
photographer for glass artist Dale Chihuly.
Much of her training and experience as a sculptor in Sweden,
Denmark, and Seattle was centered around glass, often
combined in some way with photography, though not necessarily
her own. Archival black and white photographs, typically
found family photo-album snapshots, are embedded "like
fossils" in blocks of glass or other domestic objects cast in
glass, including real washboards and house shapes. The
photographs float as if in water, sometimes deliberately
distorted, and perhaps joined by distorted reflections of the
viewer.
At CGCA, Batty chose not to work with photographs. She
focused, instead, on two bodies of work, both are minimal and
color-oriented. One, consists of smallish vertical blocks of
sand-cast glass, each a good size to pick up in one hand.
Each is a simple color-based geometric painting, complete in
itself. There is a sense that the grid determines these
soft-focus geometries, but color is paramount. "I think of
these as little paintings. I want to use the frozen liquid
quality of that depth."
"The advantage of not being from a glass tradition is doing
things a little unexpectedly." Each "painting" was cast in a
sand mold about three inches deep. Such open-faced molds
present a front and a back. Reversing the usual order of
color casting, Batty first pours a thin transparent layer,
the front, which takes on the diffuse texture of sand. Color
is added as a block with inclusions of sand-blasted wafers.
These read as shapes in the final work. More color in the
form of ground glass is applied heavily to the open back of
the casting. The finished object changes in appearance as
light and the viewer change positions, enabling Batty, "to
use the frozen liquid quality of that depth."
Nearly all the painting/objects are just two colors: red and
white; orange and pink; dark blue and jade green; but the
color which occurs most often is a soft blue-green inspired
by the famous "turquoise milk" color of Lake Louise: "my
favorite color since childhood." Batty, a dedicated
competitive rower, has intense memories of the colors of
water--mostly icy-- and of terrain: "the landscape of
Denmark, unspoiled Northern Canada, Greenland, the Alaskan
tundra." Her experience as a pilot informs her affinity for
these geographically specific colors and, "There is this
beautiful thing that happens at twilight or night: Lights at
night have this consistent apricot orange. They are like
little jelly candies." The grouped blocks have a
pictogram-like linguistic quality, and will probably be
displayed as diptychs or triptychs, perhaps displayed on a
shallow shelf where they can catch the light from all sides.
"What happens with light and optics is what attracts me to
glass," Batty explains.
A second project, intended for a commission she received from
the Seattle Public Library system, was the casting of simple
elements: triangles, disks, hemispheres, cubes, rectangles,
circles, spheres, and cones for a large installation. She
plans to mount these pieces, each a single intense
translucent color, in grids on white rubber, "like a code,
encoded language. I'm fascinated with language and I want to
take them as little symbols."
In Walter Ong's classic discussion of written language,
Orality and Literacy , Ong writes, "The grapholect (any
written language) bears the marks of the millions of minds
which have used it to share their consciousness with one
another." Language in the abstract is a perfect subject for a
public work in a library; however, Batty is personally
concerned with the number of languages we are losing. Each
loss represents the death of a unique collaborative human
effort.
The library project, as well as the painting blocks, reveal a
lively sensitivity to scale, utilizing small elements which
could be seen as microcosms within larger fields. These
characteristics, as well as her consistent reference to the
grid, harmonize with the linguistic bias in Batty's work at
CGCA. No doubt, this theme will continue to resonate through
her work in coming years.