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  17 September 2009

Sculpture & Installation  

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Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York
CGP LONDON
Galerie Florian Walch, Munich
Priska C. Juschka Fine Art, New York
Galerie Michel Rein, Paris
 
 
Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York
 
 
Stephen j Shanabrook at Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York
 
 
STEPHEN j SHANABROOK
Liquid LUSHES and Late Night House of PILLS

September 17 - October 17, 2009
Reception Thursday September 17, 6-8pm

Looking at Stephen j Shanabrook's work is like watching the horse jumping over an obstacle and instead of landing on the other side it starts to float and you are lost. Like a man on a wire, Shanabrook restlessly walks the disturbing line between heaviness and zero gravity, between painful and sweet, death and beauty; melting them together - metaphorically and literally - into one frozen state, one fossil. In 'Hopping Hills, the Pharmaceutical Landscape', the artist melts plastic prescription pill bottles and presses them into the form of Easter bunnies. An installation of running and hopping rabbits made out of hundreds of empty pill vessels suggests that prescription drugs have become the new religion, with addiction to drugs the new American side effect - the result of lost hopes and multiplying disconnections between people and reality..

In Shanabrook's sculpture 'Island of the Lotus-Eaters' the viewer is seduced by the beauty of a huge flower, which upon closer examination becomes again, just a pile of melted drug bottles. On his long journey back home Odysseus visited the lethargic island of Lotus-Eaters. The lotus fruits and flowers, which were narcotic and addictive, were the primary food of the islanders. The Lotus-Eaters entertained Odysseus' men to the drug causing them to forget about their strong desire to go home, now they only wished to stay and eat more lotuses. The labyrinthine journey back home is the methaphor of our lives. While drug induced illusions have the tendency to bring us 'home', most of the time it's a wrong turn on a slippery road - and often a fatal one.

Shanabrook isn't a stranger to addiction, he went to hell and back on his own. Whith a mix of materials in non-stop experimental process, which for the addictive personality is never enough, in combination with themes of longing for home - strongly reminds us of another mover - Martin Kippenberger. With similar types of gestures, such as one where Kippenberger painted his Ford Capri in brown paint imbued with oatmeal, Shanabrook covers common plastic soldiers in delicious dark chocolate in his new installation 'Battle of Losers and Lovers'. The sweet, desirable chocolate dripping on the white surface of stacked office tables (an allegory of the everyday working process) becomes messy bloody evidence of fear and dissatisfaction with one's self.

In his rather horrifying statement 'The Chocolate Soldier or Heroism - The Lost Chord of Christianity' C.T. Studd (1860-1931) said "a soldier without heroism is a chocolate soldier! ...dissolving in water and melting at the smell of fire. Sweeties they are! Bonbons, lollipops! Living their lives in a glass dish or in a cardboard box, each clad in his soft clothing, a little frilled white paper to preserve his dear little delicate constitution." More than a hundred years later we understand that there should be place for all - chocolate soldiers, losers and lovers. While, and especially because, society puts so much pressure on people's lives, that every day feels like a battlefield. And in the end of the day we want a prize, we want chocolate, we want home. Shanabrook remembers reading an account of a field medic from the Vietnam War. "He was explaining what he carried with him in his medic satchel, these bare necessities as he called them included: gauze, morphine, tape, comic books and M&Ms. The candies were for the mortally wounded soldiers, the ones that would never make it to the field hospitals. For these soldiers the candy was a way to satisfy a simple desire to feel closer to home, before they slipped away into that unknown jungle."
(Veronika Georgieva, 2009)


Image:
Stephen j Shanabrook
Courtesy of Daneyal Mahmood Gallery, New York


Daneyal Mahmood Gallery
511 West 25th Street 3rd Floor
New York, NY 10001
+1 212 675 2966


 
CGP LONDON
 
 
Katy Merrington Hang Gliding, 2005
 
 
NOW YOU SEE IT

Cecilia Bonilla / Jemima Brown / Lucy Clout / Sarah Dobai / Andy Harper / Richard Healy / Hunt & Darton / Timo Kube / Katy Merrington

Curated by Liz Murray

23 Sept to 25 Oct 2009
 
Now You See It features the work of artists whose practices engage with mimesis and reality. Although we know we shouldn't always believe our eyes - that the camera can be persuaded to lie, that illusions, fakes, hoaxes and phishing attacks are a part of everyday life - disbelief remains hinged on our trust in images. It's the ballast necessary for us ever to be fooled at all. However, Now You See It is not a show of artists as illusionists per se. Instead it brings together a variety of works that invest in alternately concealing and revealing the innate trickery of their own production. As though slithering subtly beneath the veneer of the sensible and the everyday, the artists share an interest in tampering with rules of engagement with the image. They seem to suggest that the more 'real' an imitation appears, the more fraudulent it can be also.

Now You See It, with its unspoken underside '...Now You Don't', suggests the magician's rabbit trick - the conjuring spectacle, the imagined, suspected sleight of hand. For Timo Kube, Richard Healy and Jemima Brown, the chosen vehicle for this is the prototype or model and its potential to both imitate not only something present, past or future, but also itself and its own private means of production.

Brown's approach involves making life-sized wax models styled on the trendy Hoxton art set. Although disarmingly real at first glance, the viewer comes to notice that something is amiss, or quite literally missing from view. A pigeon chest is concave to the point of collapse, a torso of a woman reclining melts into the floor. The initial physical, equivocal encounter with the work is undermined by these absences, this floating off of body parts, leaving the viewer to retrieve and complete what they can. Healy's Works from the Near Future, involving a virtual model of the gallery, similarly asks the viewer to enter a world where expected detail is drained from view. Instead as you pass from room to room, flags are glimpsed, curtains swaying in a seductive breeze. For Healy the virtual model is as though in anxious homage to the building that already exists. If his work hints at a critique of the colonisation of the gallery space and its production, as Brown comments on those who occupy and adorn such environments, Kube uses the model/prototype as a device to distance the viewer from simple representation, troubling an equilateral triangle into a 3D form. From a small geometrical drawing the irregularities of translating one material into another are made apparent. Through allowing mis-measurement and other slippages to evolve within the process of making, a hierarchy of forms loses its co-ordinates.

Cecilia Bonilla, Lucy Clout and Hunt & Darton work within a social, gendered space and through subtle re-enactments and interventions ask us to re-examine our encounters with familiar imagery. While Bonilla's Horse Riding is made through filming found still images of women from commercial magazines whose privilege is parodied to comic effect, Clout's buh, buh, buh presents a woman performing a faltering sales pitch for a series of paper collating machines. Both isolate a fragment of the everyday and re-position it for scrutiny in all of its pathos and fragility. Everybody Moving On by Hunt & Darton delves under the surface of communication, focusing more on the 'out-takes' and the eccentricities of human behaviour. Embarrassing knowledge is shared between friends in what resembles a dysfunctional sketch show.

Sarah Dobai's fixed-frame 16mm film Nettlecombe is set in the landscaped gardens of the Somerset estate with which it shares its name. The work reveals the wind that sweeps through this idyllic view is in fact a realtime mechanical performance. Achieved through use of wind machines and ropes, the trees and bushes are animated like puppets within the set-like space of the garden. The film, which was made in one day and is shown sequentially as it was shot, both creates and undoes the illusion of wind as a natural phenomenon. Nettlecombe plays upon various cinematic references as it takes apart an instance of the kind of artifice commonly used in mainstream realist filmmaking.

Katy Merrington and Andy Harper's work share an investment in characterisation within stories, in how they are generated and in why all is not always as it first appears. Although the end result is substantially different, both cite an interest in how we perceive the synchronisation of events. Merrington made the piece The Major and His Friend after experiencing a similar incident to the one told, while carrying around a copy of Roland Barthes Mythologies in an overnight bag. Harper begins making work through an exercise in mark making, repeating familiar processes and procedures. Both then allow a semi-autonomous other to influence the completing of the work. For Merrington colloquial and formal styles intermingle, language and interpretation, sound and vision follow on one from the other, making little linear sense. Harper allows his mark making to be governed at incremental stages by ever-changing rules and observations, at once overseeing and overseen by the image. Like much of the work in this show there is a sense of play with the mainstream, known conventions are referenced and taken apart with wit and deftness. Only at the moment of exposure do we become aware that the conjurer's hands are truly misleading. There is intensive labour going on behind the scenes.


Image:
Katy Merrington Hang Gliding
Video 2'16 secs, 2005
Courtesy of the artist


CGP LONDON
Southwark Park
London
+44 (0)20 7237 1230


 
 
 
Galerie Florian Walch, Munich
 
 
Jess von der Ahe, Lady Madonna, 2008
 
Jess von der Ahe
"funnyfarm"


September 11- October 16, 2009

In a departure from her paintings, Galerie Florian Walch is proud to present the first sculptural show of the Los Angeles born artist, Jess von der Ahe in Europe. Eleven hand carved wooden figures, a selection of von der Ahe's "drolleries marginella" drawings and a few wall paintings, make up the show entitled "funnyfarm".

Language and titles are certainly as important an aspect as the contrasts in meaning and image in von der Ahe's artworks. 'Happy Camper' (2008), for example, is a term for a person, who is content or happy. However, the artist has used it to name her wooden sculpture, which combines a realistic white human skull with the salmon-pink legs and clams of a crab. This hybrid concoction appears like a genetic engineering experiment gone wrong. Similarly the phrase bird's eye view usually explains the (bird's) view from above, yet in von der Ahe's 'Bird's Eye View' (2009) it is the bird peering upwards. Sitting incongruously on the erect penis of a sullen looking, bald man, this bird is looking up towards a thin tree trunk, which is sprouting several short branches as well as a couple of leafs, and which is growing out of the man's shoulder. Again the walnut male is impeded further in that he has no arms and no legs, though his facial expression seems one of endless patience with the bird and his odd situation.

By melding man and nature in paradoxical and yet indivisible ways, von der Ahe seems to be referencing the small drawings that appeared in the margins of manuscripts from the Middle Ages and the Renaissance known as 'drolleries'. Such fantastical, even mythical beings can be found in von der Ahe's body of sculptures also. One example being 'Bottle Boy' (2009), a naked young man bending backwards, the shape of his erect penis being repeated by similar looking bottles sprouting in a line from his belly and chest, or the happy looking sheep, whose woollen coat has been replaced with voluptuous women's breasts. The title of the sheep is 'Arcadia' (2009) incidentally, the name of Jess von der Ahe's home town. So it seems that even if Jess von der Ahe herself is not from the imaginary place Arcadia, then her sculptures certainly might be.

Jess von der Ahe has shown extensively in America, including many solo shows in Los Angeles, Davis, New York, and San Francisco .Von der Ahe has recently shown at the EresFoudation "Struggle for Life" 2008- 2009 Munich, Germany and the DG, "In the Beginning" in Munich 2007. A catalogue from her last soloshow at Jeannie Freilich Fine Art , NY entitled "Ludwig and I" is also available. Her work is in the collections of the Berkeley Museum, Peter Norton Family Collection, and John Waters among others.


Image:
Jess von der Ahe, Lady Madonna, 2008
15 x 13 x 11 in
Stained Lime-wood
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Florian Walch, Munich

 
Galerie Florian Walch
Hartmannstrasse 1
(near Promenadeplatz, across from Tobacco)
80333 Munich
Germany
+49 89. 255 44 755

 
 
 
 
 
Priska C. Juschka Fine Art, New York
 
 
Jade Townsend, Sick, Sick Wind 
 
 
Jade Townsend
Sick, Sick Wind 

Installation

September 10 - October 17, 2009

Priska C. Juschka Fine Art is pleased to present Sick, Sick Wind, an installation by Jade Townsend revolving around a constructed pig-shaped, winged battleship, marking his third solo exhibition at the gallery. After having first set sail on August 13, 2009 at the Queens Museum of Art in Flushing Meadows Corona Park as part of Duke Riley's Those About to Die Salute You - a naval battle performance modeled after the Roman 'Naumachia,' in which the Emperor would flood the Coliseum and force condemned prisoners to engage in bloodsport as a way of diverting the masses from impending socio-economic collapse - Townsend's 'pig' battleship runs aground, transformed into a full gallery installation. Complete with masts and canons to resemble a beached decaying Spanish galleon, the giant wooden vessel appears marooned and abandoned in an incongruous interior landscape - left to rot in the indeterminate space in which it has disembarked.

Consistent with his past work, this sculptural installation stems from a combination of ingrained sources; Townsend pulls obscure references from history, literature, pop culture and song lyrics, and restructures them, forging a new configuration from the resonating parts. Comparable to stringing excerpts together from different books to transform the narrative, the work re-contextualizes the disparate elements to form a coherent entity - alluding to the increasing difficulties of raising protest against the pervasive greed within the global capitalist system. Its citizens seem to be left alone in the debris of a global shipwreck, fighting for resources and never ceasing to compete within an economic system that creates division and discourages collaboration.

Jade Townsend was born in Iowa and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. He holds a BFA from Iowa State University in Ames, IA and an MFA from Hunter College, New York, NY. His installations have appeared in numerous exhibitions, both nationally and internationally, including Chelsea Visits Havana as part of the 10th Havana Biennial, Museo del Bellas Artes, Havanna, Cuba; Born Between..., Cress Gallery, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, TN; The Peekskill Project, organized by the Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, Peekskill, NY; Nature Interrupted, Chelsea Art Museum, New York, NY; Waste Not, Want Not, Socrates Sculpture Park, Queens, NY and Born Between Piss and Shit, Art of This Gallery, Minneapolis, MN. Most recently, Townsend participated in Duke Riley's Those About to Die Salute You at the Queens Museum of Art in Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Queens, NY.

The artist would like to give a special thanks to Priska C. Juschka Fine Art, Kitty Joe Sainte-Marie, Duke Riley, The Queens Museum of Art, Alberto Magnan, Dara Metz, Jamison Brosseau, Sheldon Moyer, William Powhida, Kevin Lips, Jimmy from the Abandoned Ice Rink, Bryan Derballa, Hansraj Maharawal, Tom Robinson, Yumi Nakamaru, Manu Sawkar, Topshelf Dave, Sarah Merenda, Jose Fong and Michael Petersen for their support with this exhibition.


Image:
Jade Townsend
Sick, Sick Wind
Installation
11 x 21 x 27 ft. (3.5 x 6.5 x 8 m)
Image courtesy of Priska C. Juschka Fine Art


Priska C. Juschka Fine Art
547 West 27th Street
2nd Floor
New York, NY 10001
+1 212-244-4320


 
 
 
Galerie Michel Rein, Paris
 
 
Stefan Nikolaev, What Doesnt Kill You Makes You Stronger. Fruit of the Loom, 2009 
 
 
Stefan Nikolaev, NEW WORKS OLD DREAMS

12 September to 10 October 2009

Object, Entity, Sculpture. His, Mine, Yours, Ours...
 
In his newest one-artist show Stefan Nikolaev is thinking exclusively through objects. This might be quite natural - after all in the world of today objects ever more tightly surround us. But it also might be because the object is one of the most obvious ways to hold on to memories, to capture both the past and the fast changing present, to involve our own selves with the above in a complex web of intertwined moments. It is through objects that we usually explore the world, learn about history, and imagine unknown circumstances. We often try to express feelings and thoughts through objects, we transform them into symbols, and we invest them with meanings and associations. We award prizes by giving objects, we use objects to commemorate, and objects are also a fact of vanity. Until recently the propaganda of the Marxist-Leninist philosophy was trying desperately to affirm the primacy of the spiritual over the material culture - the latter is obviously winning now while growing and expanding much faster than either our needs or desires. In the history of art the world of objects has offered just as much inspiration to artists as, for instance, the landscape or the human body. Take for example the wine glass in the works of Willem Heda, the copper vessels of Chardin or the famous Ceci n'est pas une pipe of René Magritte...

The objects of Stefan Nikolaev are just as diverse as history teaches us - from the heirlooms to the ATM, from the epergne to the "monument" of the comics' coyote. The artist is mixing reality and artificiality in the world of objects; he is transgressing the elitist hierarchies between objects and does not pay attention to their spheres of origin and production. For instance, one of the gigantic rings titled "Nikola" (2009) is a copy of an actual piece of jewelry. It was on the finger of an Orthodox priest, the great-grandfather of the artist, when he died in bed in the hands of a young woman, not his wife. This slightly amusing (though with a tragic ending) story has happened in a traditional Balkan society where people prefer talking about the macho symbolism of the event rather than the specific circumstances of life. Thus the ring grows in importance to the levels worthy of an archaeological relic from an ancient epos. The materials used have similar connotations - they look like coming from the Stone or the Iron Age, from the times of heroes and titans!

Stefan Nikolaev is treating in a similar way, like a gigantic sculpture, another one of his personal amulets, the ring of his great-grandmother - "Donka" (2009). It has an even more aggressive character with its powerful chthonic roots holding the stone. One is reminded of the myth about the origins of the ring - from a link of the chain from which Prometheus was freed...
These huge "links" from the chain of family history would give a field day to a semiotics expert - they provide vast spaces for reading into the gender relations in the Bulgarian, Balkan society of the past, their current interpretation, connotations and symbols that are springing up in the works of contemporary artists almost subconsciously though quite persistently.

The human sculls that Stefan Nikolaev seems to be obsessed with - happen to become fruit bowls - "What Doesn't Kill You Makes You Stronger. Fruit of the Loom" (2009), and are projecting quite different aesthetical impulses. The porcelain's fragility, the pure whiteness of the material, the exquisite forms and delicate gilding of the objects - all these qualities could easily add up to a certain kind of "beauty" had it not been for the reference to a bone (the term "bone porcelain" is still used for the kind of material where bone ashes are mixed, though not human). Scientific research maintains that the ability of our brain to recognize and distinguish faces does not make us more "accustomed" to the sight of a skull. This is the reason why for most people a skull is a direct reference to death - Vanitas, all is transitory, all of us - too. Then why - the skull as a memento mori in the überdesigned life of the contemporary human being? Or maybe this is a reference to the times of the medieval Bulgarian Khan Krum (8 c. AD) who ordered a mug for wine to be carved out of the skull of the Byzantine emperor Nikephoros Ist whom he defeated in battle? Although within the European Union questions concerning national identity are not always possible to settle through the copyright over ratatouille, for instance, still the specifics of the national cuisine and table arrangements do remain substantial. Maybe the porcelain skulls in the Stefan Nikolaev show are material evidences for the "clan" memory?
...
 
Iara Boubnova
August 2009
 
 
Image:
Stefan Nikolaev
What Doesnt Kill You Makes You Stronger. Fruit of the Loom, 2009
photo P.Blanchecotte
Courtesy of Galerie Michel Rein


Galerie Michel Rein
42, rue de Turenne
F-75003, Paris
+33 1 42 72 68 13


 
 
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