VISUAL MEDIA

MARY F. COATS & MARY LAUBE, RESCUE TACTICS

August 21, 2023

“Every painter’s studio has an inventory of failed works. Although these paintings remain hidden away they are necessary to the creative process. Rescue Tactics is a collaborative project in which two painters exchange their discarded works until new resolutions are reached.”

Skittles

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Skittles
oil on canvas
36x48in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube

Baller-tini

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Baller-tini
oil on panel
36x48in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube

Our Room: A Space Odyssey

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Our Room: A Space Odyssey
oil on canvas
30x24in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube

Youngstown, 1957

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Youngstown, 1957
oil on panel
36x48in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube

Sherb-ERT

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Sherb-ERT
oil and acrylic on MDF
12x12in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube

Les Pyrenees

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Les Pyrenees
oil and acrylic on panel
12x12in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube

Greyhound

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Greyhound
oil on panel
42.5x32.5in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube

Robocop

Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube
Robocop
oil on canvas
18x18in.
River Styx Magazine
© Mary F. Coates & Mary Laube


Born in London, England, but raised in Evanston, Illinois, Mary F. Coats is currently based in Lubbock, Texas. She received an M.F.A from the University of Iowa in 2013 where she was awarded the Mildred Pelzer Lynch Fellowship in Painting. Recent exhibitions include Moments Like This at Woman Made Gallery in Chicago, IL, Under, Over, and Within at Studios on Sheridan in Peoria, IL, Familiar Spirits at the McLean County Arts Center in Bloomington, IL, Funkytown at Urbano Cellars in Berkeley, CA, and Retrieval of the Beautiful at The Painting Center in New York, NY. Coats has taught at the University of Iowa, Grinnell College, and Kirkwood Community College.

Mary Laube’s work represents the instability of identity and culture within the context of transnational narratives. How can art disrupt reductive and colonial perspectives of culture? How can abstraction propose new worlds and futures? Her paintings engage these questions through the representation and abstraction of museum artifacts from her birthplace. Objects such as Korean wrapping cloths, ink stones, Buddhist statues, and folk paintings surface in the work as synthesized forms that appear flattened, off-kilter, and often unnamable. She uses abstraction as a device for re-shaping seemingly embalmed fragments of history into mutable ideas. Through re-imagining historical objects, her paintings become artifacts of displacement, reunion, decolonization, memorial, and myth.

Laube (born Seoul, Korea, 1985) is an Associate Professor at University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She received her MFA (2012) from The University of Iowa, and her BFA (2009) from Illinois State University. Past exhibitions include the Knoxville Museum of Art, Ortega y Gasset Projects (NYC), VCU Qatar (Doha), Monaco (St Louis), The Spring Break Art Show (NYC), and Coop Gallery (Nashville). Artist residencies include Yaddo, Wassaic Project, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Vermont Studio Center, and Stiwdeo Maelor in Corris, Wales. Past publications include Art Maze Mag, Maake Magazine, and New American Paintings. In 2019, Mary received the Contemporary Visual Art Bronze Award from AHL Foundation. She is a co-founder of the Warp Whistle Project, a collaborative duo with composer Paul Schuette. Together, they make work that merges kinetic stage sets with music performance.