The Parallel Series | 2004-2012

IMAGES     VIDEO

The Parallel Series (2004-2012) is an immersive experience of sight, sound, and soul within a painterly context.  Countering two platitudes in parallel, “Painting is dead” and “God is dead,” Heaton’s new images literally come to life with the pulsing, chirping, and breathing of the natural world that surrounds her in rural Virginia: a simmering fire, a rainy spring forest, insects on a summer night, a beating heart, the cry of a lonesome bird.  None of the effects are recordings.  Analog electronic circuits, designed by Heaton to generate this audio-visual show, adhere to the paintings’ surfaces.  Form, function, and content are integrated into highly original compositions of The Parallel Series

The landscapes, Spout Run at DuskSpout Run in the RainSummer Insects (Midday July), and Fireflies – With an Insect Chorus at Dusk in a Grassy Field, provide visceral experiences of nature’s pleasures.  The sounds of crickets, cicada, and birds are electrical phenomena crafted by Heaton.  When the paintings are “turned off,” their dormant surfaces continue to sparkle with shiny plastic parts, the glint of lead solder, and the lively interplay of seemingly infinite, miniature electronic components: resistors, capacitors, and transistors; transformers, sensors, and timers; and yards upon spools of wires.

Other paintings manifest an esoteric dimension within the show’s naturalistic soundscape.  The golden orb of Beginning, Heaton’s first successful integration of electricity and painting, evokes The Big Bang. Solar Plexus invites Eastern meditation.  In Self Portrait (Resisto Ergo Sum), pulsing lights encircle an image of the artist’s head, like barbed wire set alight with psychic fire.  Portrait of Jesus Christ and The Holy Spirit have an audible heartbeat, while other drawings breathe to the rhythm of ancient Chinese medicine.  Silos of religion dissolve to the sound of summer crickets.

As with any technology, the electronic components in these artworks are not engineered to work forever, inviting a comparison to the impermanent sand mandalas of Tibetan Buddhism.  The Parallel Series, through the intersection of nature, energy, and spirituality, asks what does one gain when a painting is imbued with electronics; and what does one lose when the electricity is gone.  Audio and video recordings will archive the work.