Don't look for any political agenda in Dallas artist Ann Glazer's upcoming installation of black paper images at the MAC. Glazer's paper views are more sensuous than sinister; her black, abstract shapes will transform before the viewer's eyes into a different sort of personal experience. "It's as if you were looking through trees," Glazer says. "You see black outlines, and if you stare long enough, there's a Rorschach-type effect. As you make your way and wander, your own stories play out."
Trained as a painter, Glazer grew frustrated with her own obsessive need to change imagery on large--some 10-by-12-foot--canvases. "What was most interesting to me was moving things around," she says. "You can't constantly change a big painting." Now she's quite a cut-up, creating small and large images which she layers and collages together. "I can move them from wall to wall, so I'm obsessively changing them. I've been adding to this stock of images for one and a half years." She says her new work is about looseness and obsession. As soon as she left the canvas to try to sketch on a computer, partly to satisfy her own sensibilities and partly to accommodate the interruptions and disruption of raising two small children, she knew she was hooked in a new medium. "In a matter of minutes, I could see hundreds of different options that would have taken years to play out on canvas," she says. "The possibilities are always the charge for me."