Matt Larson's Art on Display

4/24/20261 min read

Matt Larson, an artist living in Waterbury Center, and formerly a chef in Paris, hung his second show in our sanctuary last week. It lights up the room and draws gasps from first time observers. The panels are large and so colorful.

Matt describes his work (and I tried to read that description last Sunday) on his website. I think what he writes, will, if you take time with it, help you look at his work.

"From the earliest times, we have tried to systematize our observations of the natural world even though we often experience the world as chaotic. For millennia, our very existence depended on interpreting the landscape and living within the rhythms we discovered.

"This study of the natural world led to the study of relationships, which eventually led to the notion of pattern. In nature, patterns are regularities of form that recur in different contexts and at different scales across the landscape, including symmetries, spirals, meanders, ripples, tessellations, cracks, and bands.

"These patterns are generated by processes that occur at many different levels, from ageless ecosystem processes (water and nutrient cycles, energy flow, and community dynamics, for example) to the relatively new disruptions that arise from human activity (community fragmentation, loss of habitat, and degradation of connectivity, among others). As time passes and these processes transpire–sometimes slowly, sometimes cataclysmically–the transformations that ensue are recorded as complex, unpredictable patterns.

"This framework–the shifting mosaic of ecological patterns that contextualizes our passage through time and place–inspires my work. I strive to balance randomness and accident with order and reason in a manner that emulates natural processes, altering and obscuring what came before, leaving glimpses of initial conditions visible through the overlaid patterns and juxtapositions of subsequent events, and thereby facilitating the emergence of abstraction -- Matt Larson