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  3 June 2010

Painting & Drawing 

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mother's tankstation, Dublin
Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle, Munich
Lakeside Arts Centre, Nottingham
Max Wigram Gallery, London
 
 
mother's tankstation, Dublin
 
 
Atsushi Kaga, He is a little bit upset, 2010 
 
 
ATSUSHI KAGA
REST WITH US IN PEACE
 
2 June - 10 July 2010

Lady Macbeth: These deeds must not be thought
After these ways; so, it will make us mad.
Macbeth: Methought I heard a voice cry 'sleep no more!
Macbeth doth murder sleep,' the innocent sleep,
Sleep that knits up the ravell'd sleeve of care
The death of each day's life, sore labour's bath
Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course,
Chief nourisher in life's feast
. (1)
 
Macbeth, the un-innocent, a metaphor of ordinary decency corrupted, is not in a happy place. Duncan done-for, the most famous of fictional murderers is riddled with appropriate, but somehow unexpected self-doubt and guilt that denies him nature's cure-all remedy, the balm of sleep.  Only the innocent, it would seem, the pure of heart, are afforded nature's fundamental right, and innocence is done best in the unpremeditated behaviour of the animal kingdom. Enter Atshusi Kaga, stage left, whose art is almost entirely mediated through his alter ego, Usacchi (a loveable trickster rabbit) and the attendant cast of animal avatars who speak in metaphoric tongues to the daily struggle with our contemporary world.
 
The practice of Atsushi Kaga (born Japan 1978, lives and works in Dublin) is as philosophically and physcologically dense as it is intentionally deceptive.  The fact that it manifests itself in the classical Japanese popularist cultural disciplines of Anime and Manga, with all their apparently attendant cuteness, masks the darker intentions of an artist intelligently working with the tools of incisive humour and social satire, conflating personal narratives and references to popular culture. In conversation at his IMMA studio, Atsushi Kaga draws attention towards two oddly diverse but equally significant influences on this much-anticipated second exhibition, Rest with us in peace, at mother's tankstation. He cites the Myotonic Goat and Sunny Liston's three encounters with Muhammad Ali in 1964-5. These may seem like odd reference points for Kaga, but for anyone who has become familiar with his practice over the past few years would have come to expect the unexpected, his imagination knows few bounds.
 
Firstly, the Myotonic goat... When startled, younger goats with the hereditary genetic disorder myotonia congenita will suddenly stiffen, blackout and fall over where they stand/stood at any impending sign of stress or threat. Older goats appear to 'learn' from experience (?), reflexively spreading their legs or leaning against something when a moment of terror besets them. Curiously, this phenomenological development denies them the very essence to escape from trauma, as they often continue to run about in an awkward, half-conscious shuffle, presumably terrifying thenselves and any would-be aggressor.  A state of self-acknowledgment of food chains and superior aggressors brings us onto Liston.  An unpopular champion, Sunny Liston first fought Ali in defense of the World Heavy Weight title in 1964. At the start of the seventh round, rather than heading back into the ring, Liston surprisingly ducked under the ropes and headed off for the dressing room.  The official story was that he retired with a hurt shoulder, but it was evident to all that he realized that he processed no answers to Ali's speed and skill.  Liston called-off a rematch in 1965 with only day's notice, and the inevitable final meeting (2) lasted under two minutes with Liston spread-eagled on the canvas, a famously emotive image that recently caught Kaga's attention. (3) At least Liston demonstrated that he knew himself and his limitations and used this understanding to protect himself from unnecessary harm.
 
Eight pages on from the introductory quote above, Ross inquires of Macduff; "How goes the World, Sir, Now?"  Only those holidaying on Jupiter for the past couple of years would have not noticed that the world has become more like Macbeth's hell, and to which, Kaga seems to advocate the highly potent coping methodology of myotonia congenita. It is as if the world's current state, with the endless stream of bad and disaffecting news has triggered Kaga's off button, a desire for occlusive oblivion. A vast multi-panel centrepiece painting of Hell (4), contains no one (good) awake: Kaga's usual cast of characters, Usacchi, Kumacchi, Alex, Pandas, Panda-angels, Pretzel men, joined by a few new members, including a strange, stylized Japanese comic book elephant, all sleep in positions reminiscent of Liston's KO. The abundance and pervasiveness of Kaga's metaphor of self-induced, self-protective narcolepsy, tacitly underscores the inherently innocent construct of Kaga's fantasy world. Following Macbeth's logic of "the innocent sleep", they must all only be visitors or accidental tourists to this realm of the damned.
 
Complex narratives, sub-texts and human dualities, typical of Kaga's practice, start to emerge; individuality and social identification, innocence and experience, integrity and corruptibility, nature and nurture, freedom and constriction. Atop a sculpted mountain Usacchi, Kumacchi and Robert (central Kaga avatars) sleep soundly, seemingly safe in the knowledge that they are guarded by dozens of mustachioed Pretzel men. Seeking narrative keys from previous Kaga works, for example, his 2009 animation, Factory, introduces the Pretzel men to represent individuality in an 'indentified' (5) world, and now they protect the sleeping artist himself. Moreover, Kaga's recent use of fabric collage adds another willingly perverse dynamic.  He recounts that as a child his mother had a passion for fashioning quaint home-made quilted fabric bags for school, in which Kaga and siblings would carry, books, lunch and gym equipment. Kaga has taken this childhood memory of social embarrassment and negotiated it into his on-going discussions and contextualization of Otaku (6) culture in a harsh and unsympathetic world.  As a self-professed 'otaku', Kaga's work withdraws further into its imaginary world as a self-protection against the 'real', so his imagination becomes more real to fellow otakus. Kaga's creation, the unrestrained libertine Usacchi is increasingly adopted as cultural hero, a figure-head, standing against personal injustice.
 
There are those that do not sleep in this new body of work, a chorus line of radiantly happy characters link hands across one of the panels of Hell. They wear retro silver space-suits, to protect them from the sleeping sickness that otherwise pervades the world. They are either evil and up to no good or have happily found a way to escape the 'grey flats'# of this world to a better place. Better still, perhaps they are visiting aliens from another world who have come to fix things while we sleep. Please.
 
Atsushi Kaga studied Fine Art at the National College of Art & Design Dublin and is currently an artist in residence at the Irish Museum of Modern Art.  Other recent residencies and shows include Galleria LEME, Sao Paolo, The Fountainhead, Miami and a related solo presentation with mother's tankstation at NADA, (all 2009).
 

1)  William Shakespeare, Macbeth.
2)  Held in Lewison, Maine, 1965. 
3)  In the total shambles that followed, the referee, as the rules assert,  never counted over Liston and did not order Ali to a neutral corner; instead Ali yelled hysterically at Liston, running around the ring, arms aloft. During this time Liston made an apparent attempt to get back to his feet, before again rolling onto his back.
After Liston finally got up, ringside boxing writer, who had no authority, informed the referee that Liston had been on the canvas for over 10 seconds (during which time the fight briefly resumed), and that the fight should be over. The referee then waved the fight off. The photograph of the Ali/Liston knockdown that influenced Kaga (by renowned sports photographer Neil Leifer) is one of the most heavily promoted photos in the history of the media, and was used as the cover of the Sports Illustrated canonical issue, The Century's Greatest Sports Photos. 
4)  Hell, is the third in a related, classical series of monumental works, Purgatory, (2007) exhibited at Kaga's first mother's show, followed by I want to bring love to socially neglected parts of you, that is my mission, (Heaven), 2008, made for the Butler Gallery exhibition of the same title, and finally the last installment, Hell, based upon the anti-heroic defeat of Sunny Liston by Muhammad Ali. 
5)  Identified, as in social identification; a conscious commitment to a mode of behaviour or appearance with the intention of blending, being part of a acceptable or recognizable sociological group.
6)  'Otaku', a term coined by Akio Nakamori in the early 1980s for a particular subculture of Japanese nerd or fan, which has strongly influenced the direction of Kaga's work. While some of Japan's otaku use the term for self-describing, semi-humorously or proudly, there has been consistent negativity towards otakus and otaku culture, including incidents of "otaku hatred" and a number of infamous murders. The amount and degree of social hostility against otakus has increased noticeably over the past years along with frequent targeting of otakus by law enforcement.
7)  Charles Baudelaire's term.
 

Image:
Atsushi Kaga
He is a little bit upset
16 x 14 cm
Acrylic on board
2010
Courtesy the artist and mother's tankstation
 

mother's tankstation
41-43 Watling Street
Usher's Island
Dublin 8
Ireland
+353 1 6717654
Thursday - Saturday 12-6pm
 
 
 
 
Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle, Munich
 
 
Jan Merta, Evropan / An European, 2009 
 
 
Jan Merta
Geist und Materie
 
14th May until 19th June 2010
 
Jan Merta indisputably counts among the most significant contemporary artists of the Czech Republic. His work was recently celebrated by a successful retrospective exhibition at the Wannieck Gallery in Brno (25.9.2009-31.1.2010). Having already exhibited at the Rüdiger Schöttle Gallery in 2004 and 2006, Jan Merta will now be showing new works at his forthcoming exhibition under the title Geist und Materie.

Jan Merta's works focus on simple pictorial motifs drawn from everyday life, which though a process of abstraction and alienation acquire a complexity and enigmaticness that transcend the commonplace. But depth of content in no way means a neglect of form: transparent, everyday objects or architectonic fragments, seemingly dissolving in the artist's brushwork, are placed against monochrome or blended backgrounds. Jan Merta renounces the clear separation of figure and ground in favour of their complex merging and interpenetration. Finely abstracted details are combined with the representational in such a way that traditional motifs - still lifes, portraits, landscapes etc. - assume an enigmatic and at times underlying humorous or ironic quality.

The use of colour is of central importance to Jan Merta's compositions: garish colours are combined with subdued shades, as in Ein Europäer, for example, a work dominated by the bright red plumage of a bird of prey against a backround of pink, green and blue tones.

Jan Merta's work Echt II combines typographical and symbolic elements. As is the case with all of the artist's works, the viewer needs a certain time in order to grasp the hidden meaning of the painting, a meaning that in many cases is revealed only through the title. The main work of the exhibition, and the one that gives the exhibition its title, is the painting Geist und Materie from 2008/2009. Measuring 195 x 430 cm, this work will certainly be the dominant exhibit.

Jan Merta was born in Sumperk, Czech Republic, in 1952. He lives and works in Prague.
 

Image:
Jan Merta
Evropan / An European, 2009
Acryl auf Leinwand, 260 x 230 cm
Courtesy of Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
 
 
Galerie Rüdiger Schöttle
Amalienstraße 41
D - 80799 Munich
T +49 89 -333 686
E info @ galerie-schoettle.de
 
 
 
 
 
Djanogly Art Gallery, Lakeside Arts Centre, Nottingham
 
 
Marek Tobolewski, 2LC SymM, 2010
 
 
Marek Tobolewski
Continuum in Symmetry

8 May - 13 June 2010

In his first major solo in the UK for over a decade, Marek Tobolewski has produced a remarkable body of work from his prolific six month residency at the Lakeside Arts Centre, Nottingham.

In the main gallery, are hung large scale abstract diptych and triptych paintings from the ongoing Continuum series. These paintings deal with symmetry and reflection. Tobolewski rotates and mirrors linear forms, layers surfaces with pure colour and exposes under painting through negative line. A constant motif in the artist's formal abstraction is the arc of a circle - albeit in a state of perpetual evolution. Tobolewski reveals an ongoing preoccupation with the endless reinvention of his own compositions, where he continually returns to existing works. Adjusting structures and refining each individual flow of a line in an attempt to reveal balance and perfect form.

".. Despite their apparent aesthetic gracefulness, there is something almost obsessive in these relentless organic abstractions. One cannot but wonder at the artist's patience as he works with no end in sight to these seemingly aimless graphic meanderings. It is this very slight sense of unease that establishes a kind of psychological undertow."
(Robert Clark - guardian)

In the small Gallery a 5m diptych Continuum in Balance, initially commissioned by Geldards LLP in 2006, it is lent for it's 1st public showing. The viewer can begin to trace the narrative progression to his recent work in this space. Early evidence of his interest in symmetry and reflection begins is at large, whilst on the opposite wall a mass of sampling studies and drawings, give the viewer a taster of the artists residency studio wall. This gives visitors to the exhibition an invaluable insight into his working methodology. Also showing are his latest work CNC linear drawings on perspex, hung on the back wall signposting possibilities for future creative directions.

"..It is this ability to take you, as a viewer on a visually transcendental journey that works so well for me, and that's before you stop to consider the fact that these are extremely well executed paintings, done with, to use the Mike Kelley title:  more love hours than can ever be repaid..." (Tom Hackett - INTERFACE a-n.co.uk)

"Nottingham artist Marek Tobolewski's work continues to entrance and mystify. Continuum In Symmetry ... is the most impressive show of Tobolewski's I have ever seen. His work seems to have expanded to fill the crisp open spaces of the Djanogly Gallery and the audacity and ambition of his 20-year project are at last given a stage on which to express themselves..." (Andrew Cooper - Editor nottinghamvisualarts.net)

Marek Tobolewski, born in 1964 in Bishops Stortford, England today lives and works in Nottingham. He has had several solo exhibitions in Europe, with key exhibitions in Paris and New York.

A 60 page illustrated catalogue with essay by Mark Rawlinson accompanies the show. Copies available on request please contact the gallery.
 

Image:
Marek Tobolewski
2LC SymM
Prussian Blue on Cobalt
2010
Oil on linen
200 x 190 cm
Courtesy of the artist
 
 
Djanogly Art Gallery
Lakeside Arts Centre
University Park
Nottingham
NG7 2RD
+ 44 (0) 115 951 3189
 
 
 
 
 
Max Wigram Gallery, London
 
 
James White, Burgerbox, 2010 
 
 
James White
New Paintings
 
10 June - 17 July 2010
 
Max Wigram Gallery is proud to announce an exhibition of new paintings by James White.
The works continue White's archiving of the minutiae of modern life. His black and white oil paintings on plywood panels are composed from the snapshots the artist takes of the objects that surround him.
 
Like the cinematic 'cutaway shot', White's images are deliberately emptied of any dramatic content of their own; our focus momentarily rests on an intimate group of objects that silently resonate within a grander scheme. In refusing to acknowledge a wider visual world, White's exacting gaze suggests an external narrative in much the same way that the simple image of a drinking glass might when scrutinized within the context of a crime scene photograph.
 
Rather than merely celebrating the inherent beauty of the banal, White's paintings are iconic, subtle reflections on the quotidian. Despite the sense of intimacy within the work, the artist equally distances the viewer from the scenes he represents. This detachment is intensified by the characteristic absence of colour and the presentation of the paintings encapsulated in Perspex box-like frames.
 
The paintings in the show derive from photographs taken mainly in hotel rooms and the artist's studio. Both locations exacerbate the sense of isolation and quiet respite from the day to day. 2.40 am (Berlin Hotel) and 2.45 am (Berlin Hotel) show personal objects scattered around a hotel room where the artist is spending a sleepless night. These personal belongings are the only reminders of the artist's presence in the room, the sole evidence of the occupier within an otherwise totally impersonal space.
 
Hangers (home) and Hangers (away) show the inside of two wardrobes, one in the artist's home, the other in a hotel. In each painting, a single empty coat hanger dominates, reinforcing a feeling of absence and dislocation.
 
Burgerbox shows the remains of lunch in the artist's studio. Here, and in Milk and Stuff and The Radio, we are reminded of the solitary nature of life in the studio. Removed from any significant action, the featured objects are however witnesses to the artist's activity. Rendered immaculately, with impeccable attention to detail, these simple still lives conjure up human presence through its very absence.

White (b. 1967, UK) lives and works in London. Solo shows include: c/o Atle Gerhardsen, Berlin (2009); Goss Michael Foundation, Dallas; Max Wigram Gallery (2007). Exhibitions in 2010 include: 'Realism- The Adventure of Reality', Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung, Munich (Germany); Dawnbreakers', John Hansard Gallery, Southampton. Group exhibitions include: The Saatchi Gallery (New Blood, 2004); The New Art Gallery, Walsall (Blue, 2000); Fig-1 (Atoll, 2000) and Casey Kaplan Gallery, New York (solos in 1997 and 2000). In 2006, he was a prize winner in the prestigious John Moores Contemporary Painting Prize.
 
 
Image:
James White
Burgerbox, 2010
Courtesy of Max Wigram Gallery, London
 
 
Max Wigram Gallery
106 New Bond Street
London
W1S 1DN
T +44 (0) 207 495 4960
 
 
 
 
 
 
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