Sayer Delk

 
Sayer Delk artwork of letters on a wall saying "I only threw this party for you"
Sayer Delk artwork of letters on a wall saying "I'd rather not say"
Sayer Delk artwork of letters on a wall saying "I'd rather not say"
Sayer Delk artwork of letters on a wall saying "I'd rather not say" plus other artwork
Sayer Delk artwork of inkjet print saying "This is the fourth wall"
Sayer Delk artwork of Teddy bears, coin rolls and MDF board in a heart  shape
Sayer Delk installation with two pieces of art
Sayer Delk installation with two pieces of art
Sayer Delk with framed inkjet print of woman in a tee shirt saying "Does thiswork as a painting?"
Sayer Delk artwork of letters "only threw" from "I only threw this party for you"
Slide 1 of 10

How can we get a hold of something that’s not there? The navigation of conceptual and formal notions of absence and presence operate as connective tissue throughout Sayer’s practice. Focusing on language and typography through the employment of a variety of media, Sayer aims to challenge signage as a public language coming up against private meaning. Her work resists easy categorization, hovering in a liminal space between sign and sculpture.

Signs are a central theme throughout the exhibition, both materially and conceptually, as something the artist considers to be ubiquitous in all spaces yet simultaneously invisible. You don’t pay much attention to the exit sign in a movie theatre until somebody yells, ‘FIRE!” Using the gallery as the primary point of presentation and entry while considering signifiers as something predisposed within a given institutional space, Sayer looks to question our engagement with art objects on a conceptual level: what is present and what is not? Did we find what we were looking for here? What was that, exactly?

Material engagement collides with spatial awareness to create a pause for ponderance once letters are read and meaning is made. Sayer uses a multiplicity of materials in her interdisciplinary practice to display ‘words on walls’ in an effort to activate a collective experience at the intersection of public and private, of commercial and handmade. In a world where signs live in referential representation of something else, YOUR NAME UP IN LIGHTS is a statement displayed by a sign in service of itself. It advocates ironically, in both language and function, for itself. Somewhere between sardonic and sincere, the artist brings what we know as familiar to an edge.

I ONLY THREW THIS PARTY 4 U
Vinyl plaster, cardboard

I’D RATHER NOT SAY
Vinyl plaster, cardboard, clear acrylic sheets, spray paint, LED strips

Detail of I’D RATHER NOT SAY
Vinyl plaster, cardboard, clear acrylic sheets, spray paint, LED strips

YOUR NAME UP IN LIGHTS
Installation shot

This is the fourth wall
Inkjet print, 179 x 120”

Rich in Love
Teddy bears, coin rolls, MDF board

YOUR NAME UP IN LIGHTS
Installation shot

YOUR NAME UP IN LIGHTS
Installation shot

DOES THIS WORK AS A PAINTING?
Framed inkjet print
35 ¾ x 24”

Detail of I ONLY THREW THIS PARTY 4 U