re-title.com
  12 June 2008

re-title.com newsletter - Mixed Media June 2008  

 
Mireille Mosler, Ltd. New York
Galerie Olaf Stüber, Berlin
THE PROPOSITION, New York
Freidrich Petzel Gallery, New York
Galerie Volker Diehl, Berlin
Hallwalls Contemporary Art Center, Buffalo NY
 
 
Mireille Mosler, Ltd. New York
 
 
Harvey Opgenorth, Museum Camouflage: Henri Matisse, 2001 
 
 
Looking Back
 
June 12 - July 26, 2008

Mireille Mosler, Ltd. is pleased to announce Looking Back, a summer group show with works by Philip-Lorca di Corcia, Karen Kilimnik, Simon Linke, Dave McDermott, Robert Melee, Jonathan Monk, Harvey Opgenorth, Clifford Owens, Nina Pohl, David Schutter, Molly Springfield and Cheyney Thompson.

Most artists are interested in the artists who preceded them and in art historical concepts. Some artists and entire movements even abandon the claim to invention, to instead look at and explore the influence of historical art. In Memento Mori and Tease, Mireille Mosler Ltd. presented both old masters and contemporary works together. In Looking Back, contemporary artists reference their predecessors and earlier art historical movements. The references span centuries, from Dutch Old Masters via impressionism to early performance art. Rather than appropriating imagery, the artists integrate, and often question, the groundbreaking ideas specific to their referents with their own practice and treatment of medium. Sometimes, the references are not immediately visible, especially where artists are employing a more conceptual appropriation.

The 1984 photograph Gianni by Philip-Lorca di Corcia shows a reclining male figure in an open window frame, the cityscape of Rome in the background. The deliberately staged pose and the artificial lighting, combined with the panoramic landscape, evoke the complex picture planes of early Renaissance painting such as Jan van Eyck. In another photograph, Untitled (Welle II) by Nina Pohl, a detail of a Gustave Courbet painting is photographed in such a way that the surface resin reflects the light-source. While this seems amateurish at first glance, the reflection of the flash purposefully erases the original citation and illuminates the painted ocean.
 
The title of Karen Kilimnik's The wilds of Fairmount Park from the taxi 9 pm from the train station from Washington, would not immediately reveal the eminent reference to early eighteenth century Romantic landscapists.  Kilimnik often introduces historical events combined with present pop culture.  Here she depicts a recent trip, reminiscent of the plein air French Barbizon painters like Corot. Also concerned with nature and representing landscape was the nineteenth century art critic John Ruskin, who is the subject of Molly Springfield's meticulous drawings after photocopies of his treaties. Ruskin believed that art was essentially concerned with communicating an understanding of nature and that authentic artists should reject inherited conventions in order to study effects of form and color by direct observation. Although Springfield does not follow Ruskin's directions by going into nature, she delivers his thoughts in an even more direct way.
 
Dave McDermott creates collages and watercolors on the pages of an aged 1970s Claude Monet catalog. The iconic persona of Monet, strolling the grounds of Giverny, is replaced with McDermott's own exploration in perception and light, obscuring the normally recognizable references and commenting on how Monet's work is perceived today. Jonathan Monk also alters and obscures original meaning in Everything and Nothing, an ink on paper diptych referencing Alighiero e Boetti's "Lavori Biro" (ballpoint pen drawings). Like the Boetti, Monk's drawings are composed of fields of tiny ballpoint-pen markings that conceal underlying text. However, Monk's drawing does not allow random letters and punctuation to be exposed, thus revealing no clues to the reading of the text.

Simon Linke takes a more direct approach by appropriating a detail of a John Currin painting, as published in a Gagosian advertisement in Artforum. Linke's consistently appropriated paintings from Artforum depict art as it is represented in the commercial space of an advertisement, and seem to reclaim art from commerce by painting it in a more formal manner. In contrast, David Schutter's painting Untitled (after GSMB vRi) explores the underlying structures of Rembrandt's Joseph and Potiphar's Wife from 1655 in the Berlin Gemäldegalerie. Schutter paints the composition from memory in complex grey tones, reconstituting the brushwork and use of light and color of the Dutch Master.

The sculpture of Robert Melee combines two very different traditions: Ab-Ex painting and traditional sculpture. By coating a mannequin in canvas, then plaster and enamel paint, Melee's sculpture becomes an imposing and featureless colossus. Melee mixes the arbitrary process of a Jackson Pollock with the monumental and figurative bronzes of Auguste Rodin. Cheney Thompson's still life paintings from the series 1741, seek to psychically commune with Jean-Baptiste Simeon Chardin. Chardin's paintings of the 1730s and 1740s often depict children in action, like a boy blowing bubbles. Thompson undertakes a new type of history painting by omitting the narrative, while leaving the constructions of perspective in tact.

Clifford Owens and Harvey Opgenorth both explore and employ performance art. Owens's large drawings were created through a collaborative effort with Joan Jonas in a performance at the Studio Museum in Harlem in 2005. After strapping charcoal and graphite to Owen's arms and legs, Jonas used Owen's body as a drawing instrument.  Documentation of Opgenorth's one hour performances Museum Camouflage presents the artist attempting to camouflage himself in front of well-known works of art. We see Opgenorth facetiously standing in front of a Mark Rothko in the Chicago Art Institute, a Christopher Wool in the Milwaukee Art Museum, a Matisse at MOMA, and an Ellsworth Kelly painting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
 
Image:
Harvey Opgenorth
Museum Camouflage: Henri Matisse, 2001
C-print on Fuji Crystal Archive photo paper
11 x 14 inches
 
Courtesy of Mireille Mosler, Ltd.
 
Mireille Mosler, Ltd.
35 East 67th Street
New York, NY 10065

Mireille Mosler, Ltd.
 
 
Read On... Mireille Mosler, Ltd.
 
 
 
 
Galerie Olaf Stüber, Berlin
   
 
 Henrik Schrat, Auto / Car, 2007
 
 
Henrik Schrat
Outsourcing


May 17 - July 11, 2008

We are proud to present in Henrik Schrat's third solo exhibition his latest group of works: Outsourcing. During his UNESCO scholarship in 2007 in India the artist produced in cooperation with local artisan elaborate and skilful intarsia. Schrat tells with the traditional technique of wood inlay contemporary topics of science fiction and comic and makes economic contexts and processes of globalisation en passant a subject of discussion.

In 2007 Henrik Schrat was awarded a UNESCO Aschberg grant, and he took up a residency at Sanskriti Kendra in Delhi, India. During his stay in India, he was interested in the role, which crafts play for the cultural self understanding in India.

The piece is called 'Oursurcing', and is a picture story about an artist, coming to India, and looking for an artisan to cooperate with..

The self reflexive piece consists of 1 large and 20 small images, and a large number of words and word groups, surrounding and characterising the story. In pure technical terms, to produce this piece is a challenge, apart from the fact, that the artisans find themselves in the very pictures - and an exchange on a very personal level had to be initiated before an agreement on the production could be reached.

India as global boom country - software and service industries - on one hand and the still strong significance of manual labour on the other starts the context of Schrats project.
He searched for artisans producing wood inlay pictures. They are traditionally located in the town called Mysore, in South India, some 120 km away from Bangalore. Artisans usually don't speak English, and so it became a quite complicated process to find partners. In the end two workshops started to produce pictures with him, and a first small series of works developed.

Those artisans have done wood inlay pictures for generations, they use nine different materials, not less and not more. The cutting technique is jigsaw and not a knife technique, the material is approximately 3 mm strong. Usually the pictures have a rose wood frame or are completely embedded into a rosewood bed.
The results of the cooperation are an intriguing mixture of cultural flavours, and as objects themselves they represent the whole context they emerged from. Manual labour versus creative labour, different buying power and life standard a producing a vibrant field they are placed in.

But the most challenging difference is the different perspective on the cooperation. On one side a self understanding from a traditional craft perspective, still with a third-world-undertone. One of the workshop had never been in touch with foreigners so far, their strong rootedness in a local but already global surrounding. Not one single electric machine in the workshop, but of course the most up-to-date mobile phone.
On the other hand for Schrat the project is part of his contemporary art practice, and a continuation of his interest in economy. He enacts on a personal, one - two - one level, what corporations do on large scale: Outsourcing. Being aware of all the connotations, rather than avoiding the context, he goes into it and seems to say: let us be fascinated by the otherness, let us all benefit in a cultural and economic way, but always lets deal on eye level with each other, that's the only way to go with all the questions in this context.

For a European understanding they are cool and stylish objects with the full aura of the original crafts object, made in a century old tradition in south India. To fill one of the slowest possible, ultra conservative techniques - wood inlay pictures - with a comic style and contemporary art content, gives the objects a unique twist. The special finish of the pieces lets the wood look sometimes, as if it would be printed plastics: this play between artificial and authentic tops the feeling, which the objects emanate.

 Image:
Henrik Schrat, Auto / Car
Aus /From: Space Journey
Intarsie, 49 x 59 cm, 2007

Courtesy of Galerie Olaf Stüber

Galerie Olaf Stüber
Max-Beer-Str. 25
D-10119 Berlin
 
 
 
 
THE PROPOSITION, New York
 
 
 Mike Park, Hurry! They Will be Arriving Soon, 2008
 
 
Not Exactly a Mountain
Mike Park & Tim Evans

4 June 2008 to 28 June 2008

The Proposition is pleased to present Not Exactly a Mountain, a two-person exhibition in the Main Gallery featuring new paintings by Mike Park, in addition to new watercolors by Tim Evans (some of which are also featured in Blacklight Burner, now playing in the Project Room).

The often whimsical and densely meandering narrative work of Mike Park is driven by his experiences living and working in the remote industrial sprawl of east Oakland, California. Anti-heroic, metonymically charged, and often sexually ambiguous, Park's polymer coated acrylic paintings on wood are a pointed yet playful counterattack on socially prescribed notions of narrative and sexual inhibition. At times dark and menacing, but always oddly uplifting, the power of Park's work lies in its ability to oscillate between the industrial warble of his immediate surroundings and the inner reaches of his imagination, where desire, loss and self-deprecation meld into an orgiastic mélange of androgynous allure.

Tim Evans works on paper are playful distortions of the figural tradition, containing disarmingly pornographic nudes patched together from disparate sources including internet porn-sites, Japanese manga and anime, and the artist's own transformative imagination. Done in watercolor, these paintings collapse representative space and realistic rendering; they are at once familiar and disorienting, contrasting graphic precision against the fluidity of the medium as nascent narratives struggle against iconographic implosion.

Unabashedly taking manga and anime as a stylistic point of reference, Tim Evans'artworks connect to a tradition of visual storytelling that allow for greater personal and transgressive freedom without directly transcribing that tradition's most superficial characteristics. Instead, the artist strips loaded imagery of meaning, deliberately mistranslating coded contexts into a lyrical point of no return.

Blacklight Burner
Mike Park, Tim Evans & Jason Smith

In the Project Room, The Proposition Gallery presents Blacklight Burner, a collaborative video animation by Tim Evans, Mike Park and Jason Smith.

Largely inspired by Hakim Bey's TAZ: The Temporary Autonomous Zone, Ontological Anarchy, Poetic Terrorism, the animation's central character is a robot featuring a modified scorpion exoskeleton. Programmed with Bey's mantra, "Art as crime; crime as art," the robot utilizes its tail to spray graffiti in an act of "Poetic Terrorism," "vandalizing what must be defaced," and thereby "loaning some grace" to an otherwise sterile row of buildings.
The title of the animation originates from two incongruent ideas; Blacklight coming from the ultraviolet/fluorescent light source used to locate and observe scorpions in their naturally nocturnal habitat and Burner referring to the slang term used to identify a work of graffiti (originally, an entire building or train) as a very good piece, with bright colors that seem to "burn" out of the wall. 
 
Image:
Mike Park
Hurry! They Will be Arriving Soon, 2008
Acrylic and poly-resin on wood, 22" x 24"

Courtesy of THE PROPOSITION

THE PROPOSITION
559 West 22nd Street
New York, NY 10011
 
 
 
 
Freidrich Petzel Gallery, New York
 
 
 Matthew Brannon, The Question Is A Compliment, Friedrich Petzel Gallery, 2008
 
 
MATTHEW BRANNON
The question is a compliment.
May 22 - July 11, 2008

No act is so private it does not seek applause.
-John Updike, Couples, 1968

Friedrich Petzel Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new work by Matthew Brannon.
Matthew Brannon continues his consideration of the cosmopolitan condition with his exhibition "The question is a compliment." A series of new sculptures and letterpress prints use New York City's immediate surroundings as a backdrop to discuss more private pathologies.

Hippocrates, the ancient Greek physician widely recognized as the father of modern medicine, once advised his students to avoid treating patients in the latter stages of consumption as their efforts would most assuredly be futile and reflect poorly on their abilities. We know now that tuberculosis was a bacterial scourge highly resistant to treatment, but it is interesting to note that the man considered responsible for medical ethics actually counseled his students that a dead body would be bad for business. In other words, public perception is everything.

Consumption plays a key role in the work of Matthew Brannon. Not of the particular tubercular variety, of course, but of the public, Keynesian kind: the kind that nudges us to want things... to retard our insecurities with trophies, career opportunities, sex and substances. Brannon's prints, referring to various consumerist topics such as shoe shopping and fine dining, mischievously turn on the double meaning of taste, both the discerning eye of aesthetics and the literal sensory taste buds of the tongue.

More ambivalent than cynical, Brannon's approach implicates everyone, including himself, and, most of all, the various and varied commercial media which dictate our desires. From high heels to spare change, Brannon's letterpress prints and silkscreens craftily play both sides: he employs mass production techniques to make unique works, uses images and methods that at once seem current yet strangely anachronistic (also mixing the quotidian with the luxury), and provides us with texts that complicate rather than illustrate. Each piece adding or divorcing itself from a larger humorous and often noir take on subjects as varied as they are irresolvable.
 
The gallery is divided into sections using handcrafted display rigs to hang his signature prints. Infused with a Freudian impulse, the prints encourage an irresolvable but productive tension between text and image. Images of high heels, sushi, sake, typewriters and adult dvds meet with texts on crime, art, sex, success, regret, guilt and shame. The show culminates with his sculpture Rat, a small shelf placed intentionally out of reach holds of twenty-five copies of his most recent novel of the same title. Denying our access to what we assume to be the shows skeleton key, leaving its content for a more private moment.

Image:
Matthew Brannon, The Question Is A Compliment.
Friedrich Petzel Gallery
Installation 2008
 
Courtesy of Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New York 

Friedrich Petzel Gallery
535 & 537 West 22nd Street
New York, NY 10011

Friedrich Petzel Gallery
 
 
 
 
Galerie Volker Diehl, Berlin (with BodhiBerlin)
 
  
 Shilpa Gupta, Half Widows, 2008
 
 
SHILPA GUPTA
STARSBLIND BLINDSTARS

Curated by Shaheen Merali
Assistant Curator Marc Wellmann

14 June 2008 to 2 Aug 2008

GALERIE VOLKER DIEHL and BODHIBERLIN are proud to present the first monograph exhibition in Germany of the eminent media artist, Shilpa Gupta. Both galleries have collaborated with the artist to allow both Berliners and an international audience further access to her particular use of regional and political geography in which she tackles issues that include notions of borders within and in-between media, religion and nations.

The work of Shilpa Gupta has been widely shown in the context of major group exhibitions, including the Media City Seoul Biennale in 2004, the Biennales of Sydney, Shanghai, Havana, and Liverpool in 2006, and Lyon in 2007. She has had a number of monograph shows in New York and in Bombay, where her oeuvre has been widely acclaimed and welcomed for its vehement reworking of the mixed media tradition. Her ensemble of works, begun after graduating in 1997 from the B.F.A. Sculpture Program at the prestigious Sir J. J. School of Fine Arts, Bombay, has included the use of interactive mediums fused with traditional sculptural and photographic elements. Performance has also played a major role in demonstrating her ability to contextualise difficult contemporary subjects and subjectivities, including personal space, and the abrupt global relationship to security and alterity: the internal experience of what Jacques Derrida aptly called "difference".

BlindStars StarsBlind is an apt title for an exhibition and a book by an artist who uses language in a fragmented form of translation. The works by Gupta talk about region, border, and territory to express themselves in their own kind of historical intention.

This exhibition highlights a spectrum of works that help to grasp those concerns that drive her aesthetic and media judgements in the age of global mediation and cultural translation. In an interview with Shaheen Merali, she described her concerns as follows: "Often artists like myself who are working in a so called 'activist' role become branded as activist artists". The role of activism is a driving force for many of her observations as she visually vocalizes her deeply felt concerns for the plight of those who remain speechless and are made silent through disempowering conditions.

The crossover between facilitation, production, performance, and gallery practice creates a rich mix that helps render the agonizing cosmopolis of cultural exchange and political discourse. Triggering such mechanisms and positions, Gupta allows us to evaluate the lived and perceived experiences of our realities by bringing together a number of contradictions in the fabric of contemporary life and our notions of freedom.

Furthermore, Gupta's leanings towards a more democratising, even socialist, agenda in terms of ideology allows her to remain somewhat sceptical of the role of the market place in the artistic realm. Her works question this contradictory position in both their construction and in their context.

In creating a world as her ambition, she helps us to manage the necessary labour in looking at and measuring a strategic globalisation, which is based on disruption, rather than focussing on a crisis state where consumerism seems to be the only measurable form of change.

The exhibition BlindStars StarsBlind prompted an identically titled publication which will be launched at the end of June 2008.

Image:
Shilpa Gupta
Half Widows, 2008
photo, Diasec
110x249cm

Courtesy of Galerie Volker Diehl

Galerie Volker Diehl
Lindenstrasse 35
D-10969 Berlin
 
 

BodhiBerlin
Hamburger Bahnhof
Invaliden Strasse 50-51
10557 Berlin
 
 
 
 
 
 
Hallwalls Contemporary Art Center, Buffalo NY
 
  
 Seized at hallwalls Contemporary Art Center, Buffalo NY
 

Critical Art Ensemble / Institute for Applied Autonomy

Seized
 
7 June 2008 to 18 July 2008

SEIZED examines the physical artifacts of the 2004 FBI investigation of Buffalo artist Steven Kurtz. The items the FBI seized from his home are represented here in photographs of the negative spaces they left behind: missing computers, books, notes, props from performances, lab equipment and unfinished manuscript. Balancing these empty spaces is the voluminous pile of garbage left behind by federal authorities at the Kurtz residence, providing a rare window into the anatomy of a "bioterror" investigation. Hand drawn maps, "to do" lists, and countless articles of protective clothing are set against a backdrop of several hundred energy drinks and over thirty pizza boxes. To date, none of the seized items have ever been returned.

In addition, documentation and ephemera from the Critical Art Ensemble projects confiscated by the FBI and Department of Justice are on display. Finally, we present Marching Plague-the project the FBI attempted stop through seizure of the research and materials needed for its production and presentation.

Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center
341 Delaware Ave
Buffalo, NY 14202
 
 
 
 
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Coming Next
 
June 19-20 Photography, Film & Video
June 26-27 Painting and Drawing
July 2-3 Sculpture & Installation
July 10-11 - Photography
 
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