Osiris – On Trauma and Recovery – Peter Cochrane

Published 8 years ago

An interactive website of the exhibition may be found at http://osiris.pictures – a computer’s mouse is used for the homepage.

In its most literal iteration, death signifies the terminus of the body and mind. The lungs cease to expand and contract, the heart stops its rhythmic pumping, the electricity flowing through the brain slows its course, and, one by one, the organs are relieved of their duties. The notion of life after death has set both the religious and the scientific on hunts through historical tomes and mad experiments over the span of recorded human history. But what of death within life? What of trauma that bends reality into the unfathomable and its subsequent recovery, the meditative piling of one stone atop another to rebuild a single pillar? Cannot significant events or extended periods of pain and harm be isolated, considered, held, loved, and placed back into the greater whole? I wonder if in making internal wounds external we offer ourselves the chance to accept and heal—to lose, to nurture, to grieve.

Osiris is a tribute to trauma and recovery in all its iterations. As an installation, it is comprised of 28 death masks, each representing one year of life lived through the creation of this body of work. Each porcelain mask is broken to reflect various hardships, leading up to a massive calamity at the age of 27. To honor these events and to learn to cherish the healing wounds as moments of strength, Kintsugi, a technique used by Japanese ceramicists to repair objects with gold lacquer, was employed. Brilliant scars formed at the junctures of shattered face, each line representing the binding nature of understanding through suffering. Initially exhibited at Incline Gallery in San Francisco, hundreds of hanging lilies bloomed and died over the course of the show; an incarnation of the lifecycle and an offering of beauty for the spirit of transformation.

All artwork by Peter Cochrane

pescochrane@gmail.com

http://petercochrane.xyz

http://petercochrane.us

http://osiris.pictures

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Death mask mold of the artist for Osiris.

Death mask mold of the artist for Osiris.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Installation of Osiris at Incline Gallery, San Francisco.

Osiris 01 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 01 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 02 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 02 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 04 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 04 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 12 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 12 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 13 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 13 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 19 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 19 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 23 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 23 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 26 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 26 - Peter Cochrane

Osiris 27 – Peter Cochrane

Osiris 27 - Peter Cochrane

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art, artist, body, ceramic, death, death mask, discovery, face, gallery, gold, kintsugi, lacquer, mold, osiris, photography, porcelain, recovery, San Francisco, transformation, trauma, website
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