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Excerpt:
...The north east of Vermont might be plainly described,
written about geographically as a remote corner of a
state, bordering on Canada and New Hampshire. But this
telling would not reveal the power of the place, the
story of its immoderate beauty in the fall, its winter
serenity, and its seasonal extravagance. Places also
exist in the imagination: landscapes need myth to shape
and give them substance. The artist Gayleen Aiken is
the mythmaking consciousness of Barre, north east Vermont,
where she has lived most of her life.
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The content of art orients itself along two axes, the
historical and the spiritual. The historical implies
not so much an engagement with the artistic past as
with the unfolding quality and specificity of events
in time. This is the kind of artist I first thought
Gayleen Aiken was. The spiritual is a vertical quality,
born of trauma and dislocation, seeking to express fundamental
apprehensions unconditioned by particular circumstance.
This is the kind of artist she is.
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