![Welcome to my new site](http://elishasarti.com/images/firstpic.jpg)
Elisha Sarti, elishasarti.com, Work in progress 2012
New web site, dimensions vary.
In addition to working as an artist, Elisha is co- founder / co-director at NOWhere Limited – Contemporary Art, a retailer and publisher of fine art prints and other artists’ multiples.
She's in the process of moving from Boulder, Colorado to New York, along with her husband artist Scott Lickstein, and Tycho, the dog who acts more like a cat.
Flukes enchant me. I collect them like treasures. Many of the oddest make their way into my paintings and mixed media pieces.
My artwork often contains subtle odes to small oversights in quality control such as a misaligned print in a supermarket circular or seam lines in a plastic product. Similarly, I’m fascinated by word combination and layers of meaning. Idiosyncrasies, like an unusual phrase from a marketing slogan or a snippet from an errant translation between languages, can mutate into imagery or textural marks that appear in my work. I sometimes fancy I can divine mystic subliminal messages from seemingly ordinary advertising copy. It’s a lot of fun!
There’s beauty in garbage. As a mass-produced item deteriorates the specific course of its decomposition renders it unique. The irony of this cycle appeals to me and is the basis for many of my ideas. I am captivated by the sensibility of decay as well. Simulating an eroded texture is often where I begin my creative process. To achieve these decayed effects, I build up a surface from layers of paint and collaged elements.
The series $AVE/PRODUCE and Junkmail² are literally fashioned from trash: used tape, junkmail and paperboard boxes that once contained food or other goods. The imagery in these pieces is also recycled; I coaxed it out of the very matter I used to make the surfaces.
On occasion I stage experiments to generate weirdness instead of allowing the surface layer to determine the content. In one series I asked Google Image Search to make value judgments by searching for pictures representing subjective words like pretty, worst and perfect. The distinctly non-human results were collaged and transferred to canvas.
I’m currently forming a new body of work. In this as yet untitled series I paint acrylic on canvas with imagery from my recent junkmail collages and sketches.