Irrational Geographics: Paintings and Works on Paper

Irrational Geographics: Paintings and Works on Paper

Garry B. Noland
Dates: 
Tuesday, September 8, 2026 to Thursday, October 22, 2026

This exhibition centers on the materials used as the basis for the work. Irrational Geogrpaphics, is a play, of course, on National Geographic. We had a stack of them in the corner of my boyhood home. It was how my mom, and I, went places. Many of the works in the show are on pages from the journal. Others are found and re-used prints found in thrift stores and garage sales. These papers often depicted idealized images of mid-century America. Some of the prints were published by the United States Department of Agriculture in the mid 1960s; the so-called “good old days”. As we know they weren’t good for everyone. It is part of my job to step in and reexamine what these pictures meant and what they mean now. To quote Jean Alexander Frater: “The exhibition takes its cue from Noland's own articulation of art's role: to find the mundane in the grand and the grand in the mundane. The work is neither modest nor monumental. It occupies the charged, uncomfortable space between those two conditions, which is precisely where the most interesting looking happens.’ 1

Jean Alexander Frater, Chicago artist and gallerist, from her essay on my exhibition Loot Box, Chicago, Illinois, Spring, 2026

Novelty Landscape (after Dale Eldred), 2025. Collage on 1966 USDA poster. Paper size: 19.5" x 24" (framed) photo by the artist