新香港六合彩资料 Campus Center exhibits 鈥楶aradox of Landscape鈥 by Maine artist Jo毛l LeVasseur

A collage of images from the exhibit "Paradox of Landscape" 鈥斅爄ncludes prints and paintings of tire treads, waterways, and fisherman's rope
A collage of images from the exhibit "Paradox of Landscape" including prints and paintings. The exhibit will be on display at the Biddeford Campus Center through April 1.

An exhibition of artwork by Maine artist Jo毛l LeVasseur is on display at the 新香港六合彩资料鈥檚 Biddeford Campus Center now through April 1. The exhibit, 鈥淧aradox of Landscape: River of Life, River of Death,鈥 showcases a series of works concerning obstructions in the rural landscape and the loss of natural environments.

LeVasseur, who lives and works in Damariscotta, said inspiration for this most recent exhibit and others come from the notion that there is a 鈥減aradox鈥 of landscape that is both familiar and remote 鈥 familiar, through the iconic depictions to which we have become accustomed, and remote by token of its vastness. 

鈥淚鈥檝e become less interested in the aesthetics and in what the term 鈥榣andscape鈥 generally implies: a view,鈥 the artist remarked. 鈥淣ow, my interests lie more with the irreversible changes that result from the socio-political realities of development.鈥

LeVasseur remarked that much of his creative process and methods of sourcing materials come from walking along and scavenging discarded materials from Maine鈥檚 beaches, state parks, and along public highways.

鈥淭hrough subtle symbolism of trajectories and scars across a tortured landscape and use of detritus 鈥 i.e., fishermen鈥檚 ropes and tire fragments 鈥 as templates for printmaking and ideas for painting and installation, my work focuses primarily on primordial origins, void, and chaos, all of which I interpret as fragments of a vanishing earth,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n my ongoing investigation and art practice, my intent is to provoke, gently, how we quickly become accustomed to fabricated landscape, no longer pristine 鈥 nor wild.鈥

LeVasseur is a multidisciplinary environmental artist who holds a bachelor鈥檚 degree from Husson University and a Master of Fine Arts from the Vermont College of Fine Arts. His teaching credits include the Freshwater Arts Organization, where he led a printmaking marathon for several years; the University of Maine at Fort Kent; the Maine College of Art and Design; Husson University; the Drawing Room in Portland; studio-based learning at the Haystack Mountain School of Crafts; and the Farmington Technology Center.

LeVasseur鈥檚 work has been exhibited nationally in New York City, Houston, and San Diego. In Maine, his pieces have been displayed at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art Biennial, the University of Maine at Farmington, and Threads at the Portland Public Library. He has participated in several of Maine鈥檚 Percent for Art projects, where his work is on permanent display.

Most recently, in 2018, LeVasseur served as artist-in-residence at Husson University in Bangor, where he led several workshops in printmaking and sculpting as part of his show 鈥淚nto the Wonder: Cabinet of Curiosities鈥 in the Robert E. White Gallery and the W. Tom & Bonnie Sawyer Library.

LeVasseur鈥檚 exhibit at 新香港六合彩资料 is accompanied by the poem 鈥淩iver of Life, River of Death鈥 by e.w. oestreich, written in collaboration with the artist鈥檚 work, which inspired the show鈥檚 title.

鈥淧aradox of Landscape: River of Life, River of Death鈥 is free and open to the public. Masks are required indoors for all visitors to 新香港六合彩资料鈥檚 campuses. The Campus Center is located at 11 Hills Beach Road, Biddeford, Maine. Hours are Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.