Beverly Fishman American, b. 1955
111.8 x 203.2 x 5.1 cm
Integral to the success of this work is the presence of distinctive voids in some of the pill forms. Nicknamed “Missing Doses,” these pieces engage the vacant, interior spaces with color and light.
Fishman is directly referencing the transformative power of pharmaceuticals and the transcendent potential of visual art, suggesting the ways people have come to use both as an avenue through which to seek the sublime. The color-and-light-filled forms evoke both the metaphysical theories and aesthetic strategies of the Light and Space Movement, as the missing pieces activate emptiness, exploring the creative potential of voids and raising questions about what truly is the subject of the work.