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Of Snow and Sorrow: The Dowd Gallery

November 3, 2021

The Dowd Gallery presents a solo exhibition, Of Snow and Sorrow, by Serbian-American artist and  professor Natalija Mijatović, on view beginning October 25. The show highlights her latest paintings and  works on paper of various sizes as well as earlier pieces with a primary focus on abstracted forms,  architecture, and compositions inspired by nature. The exposition will be available to the campus  community and the public both in virtual and in-person format until December 10 of 2021. Visitors from  outside the SUNY Cortland campus are advised to fill out a Visitor Registration and Screening Form to  prevent the spread of COVID-19. The instructions are accessible on the Dowd Gallery, SUNY Cortland  website, or in a physical form in the gallery. 

Mijatović is a professor of painting and chair of the Faculty Senate at Binghamton University. Her work is  strongly influenced by uninhabited residual landscapes of urban decay and gray facades of the social realist architecture of Eastern Europe. The abstracted forms dominating most of her compositions draw  from a general theme of the industrial landscape and the interest in man-made structures and objects  defined by the quiet void of human presence. Her approach to spatial interpretation is an amalgam of  extracting visual shapes from their logical setting (electric power plants, wiring systems, factory  interiors) taken out of context yet realistically rendered and juxtaposing them against flat backgrounds.  The underlying grid system references industrial spaces with a rich history of human activity, alluded to  through architectural forms. Multilayered veils of thin glazed surfaces reduce industrial structures to a  residual patina that recalls space and time. She constructs emotionally charged images as if they were  snapshots of memory or lingering longing for the motherland. Mijatović explains, “Materiality vs.  perception. Reality vs. memory. Physicality vs. spirituality. Formal elements are an important aspect of  my creative investigation, and such is the aforementioned considerations of color palette, and  composition, as well as tactile qualities of the substrate and finished surface." 

The flatness of images and a monochromatic subdued color pallet capture the reductive evolution of  memories and ever-present residue of nostalgia. The representational elements, as well as abstracted  forms, illustrate trauma associated with the departure from her home country and the transitional  period of an immigrant in a new environment. The artist adds, “I apply thin layers of paint in a slow  mourning ritual. Veiling of shrouds, as caring, preserving efforts to stop the decay. Melancholic and  meditative, as countless small marks are being made, I am in a state of permanent prayer, mindful of the  hand that makes the mark yet remains unnoticeable. I often build up my spaces by painting them in  detail and then proceed to cover with numerous veils of transparent paint to pull some details upfront  again, mostly leaving it in a suggestive state of quiet presence. Obliteration and restoring - the notion of  loss in terms of painterly language are related to the reduction in palette and absence of figuration. I  think of the non-presence of people rather than their absence. Non-presence seems more active, in a  way, it’s a space in a latent state. Absence is a space that is left behind. I think of spaces I create as a  refuge or a quiet place for us to find a moment of reflection.” 

With each project, the gallery designs a supporting program alongside the exhibition to set the  presented works in a wider context. A series of multidisciplinary, in-person, and virtual programs  accessible to the public offer a list of guest speakers and events addressing topics present in displayed  artworks, such as poetry, music, aspects of psychology or architecture. In addition, Natalija  Mijatović will deliver a lecture, providing background for her practice as a painter and educator that  incorporates notions of personal experiences as a backdrop for her paintings.

Both external and on-campus accomplished professionals will contribute to the program, representing  both creative and theoretical elements found in Mijatović’s practice. Imprints In Snow is a reading of  poems that considers fading geographies, the traces left behind, and the absences that follow. The  reading will include poems from a diverse group of writers including Paul Blackburn, Adrienne Rich,  Wislawa Szymborska, and Gregg Weatherby. The poems will be read by Heather Bartlett, Girish Bhat,  Laura Dunbar, and Howard Lindh, Adjunct Lecturer at English Department at SUNY Cortland and  organizer of the event. 

Adjunct Lecturer at English Department at SUNY Cortland, organized a poetry reading, reciting poems by  authors such as Charles Simic, Barbara Guest, and others by SUNY Cortland faculty members from the  English Department. A musical performance, Three-Winged Wisdom: Sounds for Snow and Sorrow, will  highlight Grammy-recognized vocalist Jacqueline Horner-Kwiatek from Princeton University and award winning composer Daniel Thomas Davis from Department of Music, Binghamton University, presenting  a genre-crossing musical program curated in response to Of Snow and Sorrow exhibition that includes a  millennium of vocal music. Selections include chants by Hildegard of Bingen, 13th-century  Portuguese cantigas, new songs for voice and electric hurdy-gurdy and Davis’ Three-Winged Wisdom,  which recently premiered at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

Two Gallery Talks will feature academics who will focus on both specific aesthetics and also  psychological fundamentals inside of Mijatović’s artworks. Vladimir Kulić, Associate Professor,  Department of Architecture, College of Design, Iowa State University is co-curator of a highly regarded  exhibition titled Toward a Concrete Utopia: Architecture in Yugoslavia, 1948–1980’ at the Museum of  Modern Art in New York. He will speak about architecture of the post Second World War period of  former Yugoslavia in relation to welfare systems established both in the socialist East and the capitalist  West that promised economic prosperity, upward mobility, and greater equality and social security for  all. Leslie Eaton, Professor at the Department of Psychology, SUNY Cortland, will deliver a talk Emotional  Aesthetics of Place: Attachment, Loss, and a Quest for Hope, providing a view into psychological  landscape affected by experiences associated with attachment and emotional connection to a physical  place. Eaton explains, “Psychologists proposed that an individual’s personality and social-emotional  health depends on the quality and stability of their previous relationships, beginning with the infant caregiver bond. Attachment focuses on the quality of relationships and our response to separation and  loss. These ideas may help us to understand and celebrate the work of Natalija Mijatović through the  exploration of attachment to place, relational trauma, and the quest for hope following a traumatic life  event.” 

In addition to talks and performances, two documentary screenings will serve as a visual supplement  with references to inspiration for Natalija Mijatović’s artistic practice. 

All lectures are free and open to the public. Please visit the Dowd Gallery website and social media for  detailed information about other programs and link invitations to a virtual event. 

For more information, to inquire about an appointment, a tour, or additional images, please contact  Jaroslava Prihodova, Director at 607.753.4216. Please visit the SUNY Cortland, Dowd Gallery website for  details about exhibiting artists, other programs, safety protocols, and online booking. https://www2.cortland.edu/departments/art/dowd-gallery/

Opening Reception 

Thursday, October 28, 5 – 7:30 p.m. 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center 

First Friday 

Organized by the Cultural Council of Cortland County 

November 5, 5:30 - 8 p.m. and 

December 3, 5:30 - 8 p.m. 

Virtual and In-person event 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center, and 

Facebook, Instagram, Dowd Gallery website 

Documentary Screening 

Over Your Cities Grass Will Grow, 2010 

(Documentary about Anselm Kiefer) 

Directed by Sophie Fiennes 

Thursday, November 4, 5 p.m. 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center 

Artist's Talk 

Of Snow and Sorrow 

Natalija Mijatović, Professor, Department of Art and Design, Binghamton University Thursday, November 11, 5 p.m. 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center 

Musical Performance 

in response to Of Snow and Sorrow exhibition 

THREE-WINGED WISDOM: Sounds for Snow and Sorrow 

Jacqueline Horner-Kwiatek, voice, Department of Music, Princeton University 

Daniel Thomas Davis, compositions and keyboards, Department of Music, Binghamton University Sunday, November 14, 5:30 – 6:15 p.m. 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center 

Poetry Reading 

Imprints in Snow 

Organized by Howard Lindh, Adjunct Lecturer, English Department, SUNY Cortland  Wednesday, November 17, 5 p.m. 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center 

Documentary Screening 

In Company of Shadows 

Compilation of Shorts 

Monday, November 22, 5 p.m. 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center 

Gallery Talk 

Brutalism and Sophistication 

Vladimir Kulić, Associate Professor, Department of Architecture, College of Design, Iowa State University

Thursday, December 2, 5 p.m. 

Virtual, WebEx 

Gallery Talk 

Emotional Aesthetics of Place: Attachment, Loss, and a Quest for Hope Leslie Eaton, Professor, Department of Psychology, SUNY Cortland Wednesday, December 8, 5 p.m. 

Dowd Gallery, Dowd Fine Arts Center



Tags Natalija Mijatovic
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