Unpacked Cargo: Mary Iverson Inside and Out
Written by Andrew Katz Katz

When I visited the Cornish College of the Arts Alumni gallery to see Iverson’s Seattle show, I expected to find the luscious, large scale paintings or the smaller mixed media collages for which she is best known. Her painted, Hudson River School-inspired landscapes of the west overlaid with a web of perspective grids and shipping crates take romanticized subjects and physically complicate the way we see them. The shipping containers of goods infiltrate the pristine landscapes, introducing a persistent, man made materialism that, along with the surrounding grids, change the way everything else is seen.
But, instead of experiencing these cargo-ridden scenes, I was physically taken to Seattle’s own urban vernacular. Cornish’s show Flip focuses on an animation Iverson created from a set of 24 still images she constructed for an outdoor mural along a pedestrian overpass. Despite being listed as temporary, I was compelled to visit the overpass to see if there was a still chance to experience the real thing. After getting across town, I found myself funneled into the stream of commuters trying to make the 5:30 pm ferry. The dank, industrial overpass already begged for another round of the City of Seattle’s Art Interruptions project that commissioned Iverson’s work.
When the commuters cleared, I found the stills from Cornish-- a red cargo container arrives via ship and unfolds into a wooded landscape. The landscape is warmer than most in Iverson’s work, while the tightly packed shipping subjects speak directly to their surroundings. Inhabiting the filthy walls that wind below Seattle’s soon to be defunct viaduct, Flip stands out as the rare piece of public art that integrates into its surroundings without compromising the artist’s sensibility. The passage of time made the installation even more at home, now fully weathered to the wall and absorbing the abrasions of daily outdoor living. The apocalypse that usually blankets Iverson’s paintings is replaced by a friendlier, more utopic vision, but in the shadow of the viaduct, embedded in the daily commute, a flip of the shipping container’s implications isn’t such a bad thing.
--- Mary Iverson is a painter and public artist based in Washington State. Her work is on view at Cornish College of the Arts in Seattle, WA through May 25, Shooting Gallery Project Space in San Francisco, CA through May 4 and Breeze Block Gallery in Portland, OR May 2 - June 1. Erin Langner is a writer based in Seattle and is Manager of Adult Public Programs at the Seattle Art Museum (SAM).
Written by
Andrew Katz Katz
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