Craven and Chavez's project, Dry Spell, came to be as the result of conversations about the maintenance and grooming of residential landscapes in order to control the process of de- and re-generation, according to a press release. The installation "serves as a constructed garden cultivated to elevate and monumentalize the beauty of decay."
Those conversations were far from the first between the couple, who are among a group of artists who founded Black Hunger Gallery in Boise's North End. They collaborated on a project called Canoeing in January, which was displayed at Bricolage and graced the cover of the Jan. 3 edition of Boise Weekly. Craven's work is also being exhibited as part of Wither and Bloom, a collaborative show with fellow Black Hunger-er Erin Cunningham at Visual Arts Collective through Tuesday, July 31.
Craven and Chavez's project, Dry Spell, came to be as the result of conversations about the maintenance and grooming of residential landscapes in order to control the process of de- and re-generation, according to a press release. The installation "serves as a constructed garden cultivated to elevate and monumentalize the beauty of decay."Those conversations were far from the first between the couple, who are among a group of artists who founded Black Hunger Gallery in Boise's North End. They collaborated on a project called Canoeing in January, which was displayed at Bricolage and graced the cover of the Jan. 3 edition of Boise Weekly. Craven's work is also being exhibited as part of Wither and Bloom, a collaborative show with fellow Black Hunger-er Erin Cunningham at Visual Arts Collective through Tuesday, July 31.
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