NSCAD alumna Lucy Pullen encourages viewers to reach for the stars in her latest exhibit - NSCAD (2024)

100 Closest Stars series was conceived in New York City, but deeply connected to a history of conceptual art and printmaking at NSCAD.

NSCAD alumna Lucy Pullen encourages viewers to reach for the stars in her latest exhibit - NSCAD (1)

Multi-disciplinary artist Lucy Pullen (BFA 94)—splits her practice between drawing and sculpture. Her studio is a storefront called Lovitt NYC. It’s in Ridgewood, a neighbourhood in Queens, New York, “…which feels like the North End of Halifax,” says Pullen.

“It looks like a shop, but it’s not. People come in for handmade parchment shades. The conversation quickly turns from commerce to art, and they leave with ideas,” she continues.

For the past 15 years, Lucy Pullen has been based in New York. Her work has been the subject of solo exhibitions, as well as included in group shows and festivals across Canada and the United States. She holds degrees from NSCAD University (BFA 1994), Tyler School of Art (MFA 2001), and held a tenured position in Visual Arts at The University of Victoria (2002-2013). She also studied spatial analysis and visualization at the Pratt Institute (2016-2018), through its continuing education department. Pullen studied painting at NSCAD in the New Seattle era of the 90s and was responsible for some of the city’s legendary public interventions. Eat Your Words (1994) and 2,500 Superballs with Sandy Plotnikoff (1997) involve slipping cookies baked in shape of the word ‘words’ on supermarket shelves and tossing superballs off the roof of a parkade.

In addition to her wry sense of humour and creative use of public space Pullen’s work consistently demonstrates an interest in science and mathematics. For the past six years she has been working in Ridgewood Queens. Two years ago, a design collective moved their showroom across the street. Last summer a hip luncheonette opened next door. To participate in the cultural life of the street she opened her studio as Lovitt NYC, in August 2023. People come from all over the city to shop and eat. They consistently say “OMG I love it,” as they walk through Lucy’s front door.

Lovitt, a surname from Yarmouth, is also Pullen’s middle name. She loves wordplay and talking about art. Conversations in her space often start with parchment shades and quickly go all over the place, she says. She recently met a local video editor this way. They discussed The Cloud Chamber (2011), a work Pullen made with Dr. J.E. Albert PhD in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Victoria, that presents cosmic rays from outer space – in real-time to the naked eye, inside a sculpture. They discussed ways to visualize 24 hours of cosmic footage in the heart of New York City.

In the Winter and Spring of 2024, visitors to the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton saw her 100 Closest Stars series on display as part of Working on It, an exhibition of new Canadian sculpture curated by Ray Cronin (BFA 87). Pullen designed a series of one hundred unique wall sculptures with actual star data from NASA, with a data scientist in 2016. This work contributes to a history of conceptual art and printmaking that is the cornerstone of the College. It was designed in New York and made in Nova Scotia. Pullen works with Mohammed Issa, a master printer in Lower Sackville, who prints each work three-dimensionally in exquisite colours. She also makes steel sculpture versions of these stars. She made Sol (2022) in the Catskills with guidance from her husband, American sculptorTom Butter.

“Sol (2022) is an orange powder-coated steel sculpture of the sun. At the Beaverbrook, it stands on one side of a Salvador Dali painting beside its counterpart Sol (2016), a 3D printed version of the same form,” she says.“The steel pieces are designed to withstand the elements and reside outside, in naturalistic perennial gardens like Open Sesame Garden.”

NSCAD alumna Lucy Pullen encourages viewers to reach for the stars in her latest exhibit - NSCAD (2)
NSCAD alumna Lucy Pullen encourages viewers to reach for the stars in her latest exhibit - NSCAD (3)

How did you get into art?

I learned to draw by watching my mother. She has raw talent and studied art at Beal before we moved to Halifax. I grew up on Watt and Chestnut Streets. One naughty afternoon my mother, rather cross, said, “Go to the art gallery,” meaning The Anna Leonowens, NSCAD’s gallery on the corner of Coburg and LeMarchant. So, my friend and I wandered in there as rambunctious children, expecting to see paintings in rectilinear frames and sculptures on plinths. The gallery was wide open and totally empty—it floored me. We did several laps of it like marbles in a shoebox. I remember thinking to myself, What is this? We walked home in total silence. I never forgot that experience. When I got to NSCAD, I learned about the conceptual artist Michael Asher’s installation in the early 1970’s, at The Anna Leonowens on the corner of Coburg and LeMarchant. He emptied the gallery which was also a thoroughfare, left it open, and that was it. That work changed my perception in a profound way. Though I was just a kid, it was very clear this exhibition undermined assumptions I didn’t even know I had.

What inspired the 100 Closest Star series?

A lot of my work is modular or geometric and collaborative. My practice is somewhat social. I look for new ways to turn an idea into a physical form, so that someone else can have it in the world. I get it to a certain place and often meet someone who can take the idea somewhere else.

The stars come out of my experience with the GeoNYC community, which is made up of enthusiasts, data scientists, archivists, city planners, coders, public policy advocates, researchers, and developers interested in the technical and social potential of contemporary map making. People are doing things with information that you wouldn’t necessarily think of. The star series is a case in point: it’s a collection of 100 unique geometric forms. Their geometry is informed by the geography of their neighbours; they could nest like a 3D jigsaw puzzle. I put them in a grid because it’s an artwork, and I like minimalism.

The geometry is called Voronoi. You easily can’t hold it in your head as an image like a square, cube, Platonic or Euclidean forms, like Agnes Denes map projections. Each one represents the space between stars.

The colour is in the material. They’re not painted; they are painterly: monochromatic sculptures that behave like paintings. Different values emerge from one hue. The American artist Donald Judd would say it’s a ‘specific object’ that is, neither painting or sculpture. As a student I read the NSCAD Press book of Judd’s early writings. Each star is an object; when light falls across it and the hues change.

Each object in the series has a magnetic mount and comes with a flat washer. They can be installed anywhere. Accessible, portable, and beautiful, fluid scale, it could be somebody’s lucky star. It’s abstract in ways that make it yours; it belongs to you.

You hold the belief that showing the work changes it. What does that mean?

NSCAD alumna Lucy Pullen encourages viewers to reach for the stars in her latest exhibit - NSCAD (6)

It means that, “Unperformed work is unfinished,” to borrow a phrase from John Cage (Emma Lake Diary, 1965). Studio practice is essential. Until a work of art reaches the world, it’s unfinished, impossible to predict what will happen next, or understand what it means. I am totally curious about that experience.

Here is a tangible example: 100 Closest Stars grew out of direct contact with the GIS community in 2016, in New York City. There was no exhibition on the horizon or opportunity to show the work. I made them anyway, out of curiosity, because I am a studio based artist. They were shown for Bushwick Open Studios with Carto for two days, with Mitchell Wiebe (MFA 1996) actually, and stored in a box.

Two years later, a text came from someone at the Perimeter Institute asking if I had any work they could show. I put four boxes of stars in the car with four paintings from the Bee Series and drove up to Ontario. PI is an architecturally designed building.

The interior and exterior walls are clad with beautiful black anodized aluminum with space enough for a butterfly cleat to span the gap between panelling with flat washer, made for one-inch rare earth magnets from Lee Valley Tools mounted to the back of each individual sculpture. Now the magnets are an integral part of the work. The goal is to stay open and curious about what might happen next.

You can keep up to date with Lucy’s work and acquire many of her artworks on her website lucypullen.com.

NSCAD alumna Lucy Pullen encourages viewers to reach for the stars in her latest exhibit - NSCAD (2024)
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