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Nature
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Matthew
Gosser is a Newark-based artist with professional degrees in both
architecture and infrastructure planning. For the past five years
he has been an adjunct instructor at New Jersey’s School of
Architecture which has allowed him time to persue artistic endeavors
such as black and white photography and outdoor sculpture. Over the
past several years his artwork has been presented in solo and group
exhibits in New Jersey and Florida, as well as in private collections
here and abroad.
The outdoor sculptures produced thus far have been extremely abstract,
composed of a variety of common materials: wood, plastic and metal.
Also characteristic of these sculptures is that a single design has
been mass produced, in series of 6 or 12 units, and installed in linear
arrangements. This repetition of design unifies and pronounces the
paths these sculptures are intended to highlight.
Gosser’s black and white photographs have primarily been an
exercise in finding beauty in subject matter not conventionally thought
of as beautiful. Abandoned buildings and uprooted forests have consequently
yielded abstract compositions of rich texture, dramatic lighting and
geometric complexity. The best example of this can be found in a series
of photographs taken at ground zero two nights after September 11,
2001. |