From Joseph R. Wolin’s interview with Zachari Logan for Whitehot Magazine:
Joseph R. Wolin: Your new exhibition at CLAMP, “All of My Little Landscapes,” features paintings and drawings that depict the male body and nature—plants and animals limned with a Pre-Raphaelite intensity of detail and differentiation. As viewers, we are led to assume that each species is an identifiable one based on copious observation or reliance on botanical illustration. Yet I have also seen you draw similar compositions directly on walls without any apparent recourse to references. Can you describe your working process for the works in the show? Do you look at actual flora and fauna or their representations in the studio? Are the plants and animals meant to be recognizable varieties? How big a part does the imaginary play?
Browse the exhibition “Zachari Logan | All of My Little Landscapes.”
Browse all of Zachari Logan’s work at CLAMP.