|
Evelyn Rydz
(Master of
Fine Arts ’05) didn’t know how to respond when
she showed her pen-and-ink
drawings to an acquaintance a year ago: he
took one look at the strange,
otherworldly images and marveled, “I
never knew you were such a lunatic.”
At first glance, Rydz’s
art
does look as if it was created late at night in a hallucinogenic haze (it wasn’t). In one
drawing, tangled roots and vines appear to morph into a construction
crane and a
billowing smokestack; in another, lopsided traffic cones
rise out of a swampy
terrain alongside withered trees.
Grand in scale—some of
the
pieces are scrolls that stretch up to 30 feet long—yet filled with
intricately detailed “micro-habitats,” as Rydz calls
them, the drawings actually originate from photographs she takes on her
travels
and neighborhood walks. It’s a technique, Rydz realized
recently, that she
picked up from her father, a former architect who
took photographs of
construction sites. “I was always looking at his
blueprints and his Polaroids,”
Rydz says. “I’m interested in the idea
of buildings
as malleable surfaces in a
fluid landscape. Construction sites are places of
constant change.”
What doesn’t seem to
change is
Rydz’s intense dedication—both to her own creative process and to
bringing art into other people’s lives. She starts her days in the
studio at 7am
, cutting and
pasting her photographs,
then using each resulting collage as the basis for a
drawing. Rydz also
works as the director of GASP, a Boston gallery co-founded by
SMFA faculty
member Magdalena Campos-Pons, and as a drawing instructor at both
the
Museum School and Tufts
University. Then there are her weekly meetings with
three local
youth groups at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. They make and talk
about art, with the goal of giving the kids a “real sense of ownership
of the
Museum,” Rydz says, to show that it is “not just a static place
where things get
dusted off.” In return, the kids bring to the Museum
“a fresh, exciting
perspective about art.”
The same could be said
about
Rydz herself. This spring her dramatic drawings earned her a spot on the
Boston Globe Magazine’s list of “10
Artists to Watch.” Perhaps being called a lunatic isn’t such a bad
thing after
all.
Rydz’s work can currently be seen at the DeCordova Museum
and Sculpture Park in Lincoln,
Massachusetts, and at the Howard Yezerski Gallery
in Boston. Blue Print Voyage, the
collaborative youth project, opens
May 20 at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
|