Art at the Edge: Todd Murphy High Museum of Art 2000

  • Cameras, film projectors and piano rolls serve as metaphors for memory. Film Boy, 1998, with a reel above each ear and film running through his brain evokes the desire to capture and replay the past

    Carrie Przybilla

    organizing curator TODD MURPHY Art at the Edge

  • Although he frequently represents Sally Hemings in recent (2000) work. She remains anonymous. He does not show her face. preferring to render her as veiled (no. 6) or occasionally headless (no. 5), an embodiment of the enigmatic wistfulness that has long characterized Murphy's work

    Carrie Przybilla

    organizing curator TODD MURPHY Art at the Edge

  • Murphy's drawings often incorporate found materials such as scraps of fabric (no 11) or the paper from an old player piano roll (no. 16). An ardent scavenger. Murphy packs his studio with a dizzying array of objects culled from flea markets, junkyards and the detritus of everyday life.

    Carrie Przybilla

    Carrie Przybilla organizing curator TODD MURPHY Art at the Edge

  • The figure of the boy recurs in many guises in the sculptures and drawings. Always small and forlorn. He is everyman, stalwartly braving life's vicissitudes, his gaze fixed on some unforeseen future. Boy looks East, cover 1995

    Carrie Przybilla

    organizing curator TODD MURPHY Art at the Edge

  • Dirty, threadbare, rusted and decrepit his materials imply an unknown history that carries a hint of mystery.

    Carrie Przybilla

    organizing curator TODD MURPHY Art at the Edge

  • Murphy's sculpture has a sense of longing that suffuses his entire ouevre.

    Carrie Przybilla

    organizing curator TODD MURPHY Art at the Edge

  • Each carries a mysterious history, imperfectly but longingly remembered. Although their deepest desires are inexorably thwarted they manage to endure in poignant solitude never triumphant but always undefeated.

    Carrie Przybilla

    Carrie Przybilla organizing curator TODD MURPHY Art at the Edge

  • Todd Murphy has earned a reputation for monumental, theatrical and enigmatic photo-based paintings. But, judging from this show at the High Museum of Art and his last Atlanta gallery show two years ago, Murphy's most compelling work is his more intimately scaled sculpture.

    Catherine Fox

  • "Art at the Edge: Todd Murphy" The verdict: Haunting.

    Catherine Fox

  • In the eight recent figural sculptures on view, all but one less than 3 feet tall, the Atlanta native reveals a talent for assemblage and an acute sensitivity to materials. He fashions figures using old busts, African sculpture and chunks of charred wood. He adorns them with feathers and film reels. He clothes these doll- size pieces in tattered muslin, encrusts them with salt, stands them on peeling bases.

    Catherine Fox

  • These worn materials evoke the theme that organizing curator Carrie Przybilla sees as central to Murphy's work: "the passage of time and the desire to remember."

    Catherine Fox