About Jenee
Jenee Mateer is a photographer and video artist born in 1965 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She received her B.A. in English/Modern Studies from the University of Virginia in 1987 and her M.F.A. from the Maryland Institute College of Art in 1996. In 2007, she joined the faculty of Towson University, where she is currently Professor of Photo Imaging. Referencing art,… more
Entropy
Photography is about time and time is a visible presence in my garden. My decomposing mulch pile reminds me that things of this world are an eternal dance of waves and particles, emanations of light, re-combinations, and re-incarnations of energy. This video and the other images from this series are at once a metaphor for our layered consciousness and a reminder of eternal cycles of composition/decomposition/re-composition and our connection to, and impact on, the world around us.
Inspired by Renaissance still life paintings, representations of ‘nature mort’, Entropy developed out of my interest in the recycling of energy that happens in nature and art. The first and second laws of thermodynamics suggest that energy can be neither created or destroyed and that systems tend towards disorder and chaos. On the one hand, all that lives decomposes over time and goes back to the earth but on the other hand, complex living organisms are continually coming into being. Artists recycle energy, creating order out of disorder. My camera captures light from decaying food, and I manipulate this energy into a new form. The artist is a conduit for energy, a channel through which disorder is re-ordered in the art object. This object then has its own life. Some artifacts are more powerful than others. They act on the viewer over time regenerating energy in the form of thought. The impact of color, form and sound generates ideas in the viewer that circulate through history long after the object itself decays. The original energy finds new form through duplication and is shared, inspiring new forms that evolve and circulate through our collective consciousness.
Entropy (video)
2023
TRT 13:45:04 (should be set to loop) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qh4JtJrzTvo
The electronic audio for this piece was composed in response to the slowly changing visuals of layered compost and is meant to create a meditative space for the viewer. Low, harmonic variations suggest the movement of the earth as it slowly churns the energy of living matter while the chimes provide rhythmic punctuation as the patterns change, inviting the viewer to contemplate cycles of creation and destruction.
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Entropy
Entropy (video)
2023
TRT 13:45:04 (should be set to loop)
The electronic audio for this piece was composed in response to the slowly changing visuals of layered compost and is meant to create a meditative space for the viewer. Low, harmonic variations suggest the movement of the earth as it slowly churns the energy of living matter while the chimes provide rhythmic punctuation as the patterns change, inviting the viewer to contemplate cycles of creation and destruction.
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Cantaloupe
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Renascence
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Red Fruit
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Bouquet
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Corn
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Grape
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Watermelon Lemon
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Orange
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
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Peony
archival pigment print, composite digital photograph
Hot House Hybrids II
Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your long hair
Born of the beds
Earth born mother of bees and birds
Sister of lavender
Friend of slugs and spiders
She dances with the lilies in the light of the full moon
Her gyrations, reverberations groove
In cicada time to the beat of darkness
And in the morning
Her eyelids sparkle with the dew drops of a heavy heavenly sleep
She laughs
And her laughter mingles with birdsong and wind chime
Unseen, the wind gently ruffles the leaves
And she spins
Like the earth
Her dance continues
She spins a web on the branch
She winds her way up the trellis
Attaching herself to everything
Attaching everything to everything
One day to the next
One season to another
Rapunzel lets down her long hair
A gossamer net alight with fireflies and stardust.
The Hot House II images allude to the metaphorical connection between flowers and the female or feminine and are meant to celebrate a diverse group of women, transformed and unified by bold color, pattern and natural forms that re-affirm the female connection to powerful forces of nature and the earth. Mark Twain’s amusing re-imagining of Eve in the Garden of Eden in his book ,Letters to the Earth, as well as Alice in Wonderland, the Wizard of Oz , Frankenstein and other fairy tales have long been an inspiration for my work.
In 2017, as part of The Earth Is Intimate Series, I created a group of images called Big Girls and Painted Ladies. A continuation of this idea, the Hot House Hybrids I series (2018) became more abstract and painterly. In 2019, I went a step further and turned my Hot House Hybrid I series into a 3D installation where images from the series were printed on silk and paper and used to construct a garden of glow-in- the dark flowers. In Hot House Hybrids II, I again re-use the first Hot House images, layering and reassembling them with images of women that I’ve appropriated from the internet. In this new set of images, the reference to women which in previous images was only in the title, is realized in the image itself.
By combining photographs from my garden with watercolor to create digitally layered compositions that hover somewhere between the mediums of photography, collage and painting, I hope to suggest that hybrid forms allow for revelations in making and understanding. With this evolving body of work, where I use the digital ‘DNA’ of one set of images to genetically engineer the next, I also explore the metaphorical connection between gardening and making art. Both allow for chance pollination and evolution and rely on the interplay of control and chaos. Gardening makes me aware that cycles of life and death are circular and eternal just as making art makes me aware of the creation and destruction that must occur in pursuit of new ideas and the images they spawn.
Hot House Hybrids
Mula Bandha
Lavender. lemon thyme, wild raspberry
sweet basil, radish
ravishing arugula
my friends all
I am but a delicate flower
timeless
immortal
destined to live and die
and live again
The soft fragrant folds of my petals explode
in watermelon, tangerine, strawberry
lemon-lime and plum
Not to mention the velvety green
of my long stem and leaves
I'm a big girl I am,
a queen here in the garden
stronger than I look and smarter too.
I'll outlast you.
Perennial conqueror of new territories,
my children, immigrants, hybrid strains
defy the boundaries set forth by those who seek to control nature
my nature
I return each spring in regal attire
camouflaged in beauty
but beware
Like tangled morning glories that strangle and support
as they reach towards the sun
I am rooted and ruthless
My lineage is long
my wisdom that of the ages
I was here in the beginning
witness to she who tasted the apple
and learned of the secrets of the Universe.
For me, beauty has to do with character. In this series, I wondered what might happen if I allowed my girls to get older, wiser, louder, more daring. What would happen if I allowed myself to more thoroughly embrace painting and turn it too, metaphorically, into an empowerment. Where is the boundary between the beautiful and the horrific, the ripe and the rotten, between naivete and wisdom? In these I recognize that I am Eve and I am getting older. Like Mary Shelley’s Dr. Frankenstein, I have dissected and reassembled these hot house hybrids from the genetic shards of abstract painting and straight photography and its digital progeny. Are they monstrous desecrations of the photograph and bastardizations of painting or are they a new genetic strain, stronger, faster, smarter?
These images are connected to the work in my new book – Break Boundary: Places Real and Imagined – by the color I capture from the real world and the color I create in my studio. It is perhaps not immediately clear, however, that the connection between these two bodies of work also hinges on the idea of the Break Boundary, the place of transformation where one thing turns into something else. I am interested in that moment where to borrow from Lawrence Weschler’s book on Robert Irwin, we forget, for a moment, the name of what we see.
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Cleo.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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Mateer_Jenee_HH5.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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Isabella.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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hothousegardensmall.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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jwc2combo20.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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Mateer_Jenee_HH3.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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Mateer_Jenee_HH4.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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Trixie.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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Mateer_Jenee_HH1.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
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jwc2combo16.jpgarchival pigment print 2018
The Earth Is Intimate
Artist Statement for The Earth is Intimate/2017
Recurring themes of Alice, Eve, the garden, the snake, an original tongue, the birth of knowledge. The garden is pungent, tactile, connected to the first smell of mother, the first smell of baby, the smell of my mate. We are what we eat. The smell of the garden informs speech, speaks to me of the earth. Visceral light, color, sound, smell; an extension of my home, the garden reminds me that I am of the earth and also that I will return to it, to the dirt. I will decompose and be reconstituted. I will become part of the ground upon which future generations are built.
I am connected to the earth; its smell is savory, sweet. I dig my fingers into the soil. Worms seek cover, mysteriously disappearing into the underworld. And if, like Alice, I were to follow the rabbit, its white bushy tail disappearing down the hole, if I were to follow and fall into the earth what would be revealed to me on the underside? The garden speaks to me of the possibility of another world, a parallel universe where things are not what they seem.
My cabbage reveals labyrinthine corridors of mesh and flesh. I slip through cerebral portals, past dendrites chasing the rabbit deeper and deeper. A cat appears, calm, tail twitching, enigmatic, unhelpful. I am unable to ask for directions. My language has unraveled. Like a child, I must learn the alphabet of this strange place. A chorus of cicadas accompanies the wind. The flowers, big girls all, reach for the sky, their heads nod in the breeze. Colorful parasols, their beauty is fragile, delicate. Their perfume draws me near. They drink light and reflect its vibrant color. Big girls have secrets. They share with me their experience of time. And the roots too tell me things, whisper stories, sing operas and dance. I scale the mulch pile and my foot slips. I fall into a watermelon rind and slide to the bottom. There is no death here in this place-all is reclaimed by the earth, all is recycled. Trust in me says the snake as she slithers by. My visit to the underside forever changes the way I see things.
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jenee_mateer_5.jpgYou Are What You Eat (cantaloupe) photograph, archival pigment print, 26.7" x 40"
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jenee_mateer_4.jpgYou Are What you Eat (watermelon) photograph, archival pigment print, 26.7" x 40"
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jenee_mateer_7.jpgTangled Wonderland II photograph, archival pigment print, 22.7" x 34"
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Mateer_Jenee_3.jpgCrest (Of Cabbages and Kings) photograph, archival pigment print, 37.5" x 28.25"
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Mateer_Jenee_7.jpgUnravelled II (Of Cabbages and Kings) photograph, archival pigment print, 37.5" x 28.25"
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Mateer_Jenee_4.jpgQueen of Hearts (Of Cabbages and Kings) photograph, archival pigment print, 27.75" x 38"
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jenee_mateer_10.jpgDahlia (Big Girls and Painted Ladies) digital photograph, archival pigment print, 19 7/8" x 27 3/8"
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jenee_mateer_11.jpgPeony (Big Girls and Painted Ladies) photograph, archival pigment print, 197/8" x 27 3/8"
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JeneeMateer-Daisy.jpgDaisy (Big Girls and Painted Ladies) digital photograph, archival pigment print, 19 7/8" x 27 3/8"
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hatters4up.jpgThe Mad Hatters (Woodsman, Chief, Opera, Tango) digital photographs, archival pigment prints, 17 7/8" x 11 7/8" each
The Sky is Lemon Lime
This series is not only about pushing the boundaries of language and discipline but also about altering the landscape, re-mapping the terrain and choosing a new path. It’s about the subtle shift we experience both psychologically and emotionally in relation to our environment as our perception of where we are and who we are changes over time.
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LemonLimearchival pigment print 42" x 45"
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Blue Ridgearchival pigment print 30" x 30"
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Orange Peelarchival pigment print 45" x 45"
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Salt Pond Greenarchival pigment print 45" x 45"
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Navajoarchival pigment print 45" x 45"
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Atomic Tagerinearchival pigment print 45" x 45"
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Vermillionarchival pigment print 42" x 45"
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Midnight Bluearchival pigment print 43" x 45"
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Ink Cloudarchival pigment print 45" x 45"
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Umbered Orangearchival pigment print 45" x 45"
Invisible City
Visceral Spectrum (2006-2012)
This work is a meditation on home, inhabitance, spirit of place, on energy patterns formed like a slow beaming up, the materialization that occurs with the transference of physical presence from one structure to the next. These images also speak to our inescapable physicality, our need for sustenance, and our undeniable drive as humans to perpetuate and reproduce energy and life.
SpellBook
At the same time that I was photographing toys, I was also creating a series of image filled pages for what I imagined might become a recipe or SpellBook of sorts. Pictures from art history, media and popular culture as well as bits from books on medicine and alchemy mixed with images of the things around me. I soon realized that the deconstructed parts of these pages were potentially more interesting than the pages themselves. I started to think about streams of 0â??s and 1â??s and cityscapes, about building blocks, bits and picture books in relation to perception, memory and identity.
On one level, SpellBook considers the role that language and visual imagery play in communication and how they figure in oneâ??s understanding of self in relation to the world. It explores the â??ideaâ?? of a book as a receptacle for knowledge and memory but also as an artifact, a repository for deconstructed marks that mean less than the form they take. It considers the translation of image to language and language to computer code. It also considers (picture) writing as a means of divination and its relation to myth, magic and religion. On another level, it explores cooking as a metaphor for making art, sifting my thoughts about science, religion, language, art and technology as they relate to both the terrain of our physical tangible existence and the often intangible and ephemeral nature of thought.
Break Boundary
'Break boundary' is a term I discovered reading Marshal McLuhan?s book, The Medium is the Message. He defines it as the transformative point at which a system is irrevocably changed. I think about the water in relation to this term. By slow degrees, we are changing the ecological balance, the chemical composition of our oceans. Oil spills are just one small part of the problem. Global warming too is changing the weather and the way that water flows. I also think about this term in relation to photography, specifically, the language of photography in relation to the language of painting.
New technologies that allow for the manipulation of the image have changed forever the way we understand the photograph as a document of 'truth'. Certain celebrated photographic images of our time (I am thinking specifically of the photographs of Jeff Wall, Hiroshi Sugimoto and Andreas Gursky) are not those that capture a single moment but rather those that are composed of many moments to suggest a single moment. They make us aware of the medium itself and they are interesting because they play with our understanding of the structure and language of the medium. They are composed much more like paintings and they make us aware that time has become, to a greater extent, a tool of the photographer rather than a fixed variable.
In a similar way, abstract painting also made us aware of the structure and the language of the medium of painting. I have always been drawn to the work of Mark Rothko. His paintings suggest windows through which to enter another dimension. His resonating squares of color suggest a boundary between here and there, inside and outside. These photographs, on the one hand, very simply reflect my love for the water but they also reflect the influence that painting has had on my understanding of photography. They play with the boundary between earth and sky and the boundary between photography and painting to suggest my belief that the language used to define and understand these two mediums has evolved, and that the emergence of a new language is upon us.
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Break Boundary # 10Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Break Boundary # 5Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Couds # 4Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Break Boundary # 8Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Break Boundary Video 1
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Break Boundary #9Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Break Boundary # 6Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Break Boundary #4Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Break Boundary #2Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
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Break Boundary #1Digitally manipulated photograph archival inkjet
Pharmakon
Camille Paglia Sexual Personae
Beautiful and horrificâ?¦the concurrence of opposites, the embodiment of contradictions and the biological, slippery nature of language, thoughts about these things inform my work.
This body of work entitled Pharmakon began with a group of photographs that I took of rotting fruits and vegetables that I had around my house. Increasingly I felt that the images in this body of work began to speak to ideas about the body and intimacy. At times grotesque or surreal, this work speaks not only to my interest in the domestic and the alchemical but also to my thoughts about the loss of innocence and the acquisition of knowledge and enlightenment.
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Pharmakon installation view(from left to right) "Apple (Malus pumila)", "Rattus", "Chinese Beans (Phaeolus)", "Lepidoptera", "Tree Bark", 12" x 18" each, archival inkjet from color negatives covered in resin, 2006 "She-skin", multiple inkjet prints from color negatives, resin, string, 2006 "Garden", multiple archival inkjet prints from color negatives, 2006
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Garden, detailMultiple archival inkjet prints from color negatives, 2006
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Garden, detailsA few of the images in the Garden piece; Purple cabbage, leeks, garlic.
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Sheskin, detailThe images are of pages from the dictionary that show various words used to describe women. They are coated with resin, sewn together and suspended.
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RunesApproximately 40 plaster pieces with embedded or transfered images covered in wax, 2006.
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Runes, details
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I-Ching (1-8)Archival inkjet prints, 2006
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I-Ching (cherries)Archival inkjet print, 2006
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I-Ching (shell)Archival inkjet print, 2006
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sis.mov