31/05/20

Sylvie Fleury @ Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris - She-Devils on Wheels

Sylvie Fleury: She-Devils on Wheels
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris
Jusqu'au 20 juin 2020

Célébrant plus de 20 ans de collaboration avec SYLVIE FLEURY, la Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac présente une exposition d’oeuvres historiques de l’artiste suisse. Le titre de l’exposition, She-Devils on Wheels fait directement référence au club automobile fondé par Sylvie Fleury dans les années 1990. Puisant son inspiration dans un film éponyme de 1968 qui mettait en scène un gang de motardes, She-devils on Wheels est un club exclusivement composé de femmes qui partagent un intérêt commun pour la customisation des voitures américaines. Point de départ d’une série d’oeuvres dont la plus emblématique est She-Devils on Wheels Headquarters (1997), une installation qui évoque à la fois l'atelier d'un garagiste, le siège social d'un fan club et la devanture d'un magasin de matériel automobile de luxe - aujourd’hui dans la collection du Migros Museum, Zurich - l’existence de ce club s’incarne dans l’exposition à travers différents objets ayant tous trait à l’univers automobile cher à l’artiste. 

S’appropriant la typographie psychédélique de l’affiche originale du film, une peinture murale de plus de dix mètres de long annonce le titre de l’exposition à la manière d’un slogan. Une série de six photographies tirées d’après Polaroids montrent des chaussures de luxe en gros plan sur des éléments d’habitacle (pédales, volants, leviers de vitesse) liés à la conduite. Ces arrêts sur image mettent en scène la confrontation de stéréotypes culturels, les souliers féminins dominant un espace habituellement lié à l’imaginaire masculin. La conjonction d’un rendu flou, d’un éclairage dramatique et de la mise en scène d’objets à connotation fétichiste nimbe chaque scène d’un aura de mystère et évoque l’univers du film noir. 

Le moteur en bronze chromé est caractéristique de la réflexion de Fleury sur le ready made. En déplaçant le moteur de Ford Cosworth dans le champ de l’art, l’artiste reprend à son compte le geste duchampien d’appropriation et de déplacement d’un objet industriel. La fonction mécanique du moteur est transformée en valeur esthétique et la sculpture à forte connotation psychosexuelle devient un machine à fabriquer du désir. Accrochée au mur une robe adopte les codes vestimentaires d’une combinaison de Formule 1, faisant entrer l’intérêt de Fleury pour la mode et la customisation dans l’univers automobile. Le zip de la combinaison est ici détourné pour donner un aspect très sexuel au vêtement. La doublure est ornée de flammes, motif caractéristique de la customisation des camions, symbole de puissance et de vitesse. 

Par delà leur diversité formelle, les oeuvres de Sylvie Fleury sont souvent attachées au souvenir d’une performance. Une même sensibilité « affirmative », le même usage d'images-types véhiculées par la culture mainstream, la même position « post-féministe » recouvre un ensemble de pratiques qui ont émergé au début des années 90 et qui se poursuivent aujourd’hui.

GALERIE TADDAEUS ROPAC
7 rue de Belleville, 75003 Paris
ropac.net
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Jacob Kassay @ Galerie Art : Concept, Paris - F'O'O'T'A'G'E'

Jacob Kassay: F’O’O’T’A’G’E’
Galerie Art : Concept, Paris
23 mai - 25 juillet 2020 

C’est un chaton siamois dont les yeux bleus convergent l’un vers l’autre qui vous invite à l’exposition de Jacob Kassay. La malformation génétique logée dans cette image attendrissante présage du dédoublement à l’oeuvre dans F’O’O’T’A’G’E’. Il est en effet impossible de faire le point sur les onze panneaux d’OSB (1) de formats différents qui ont été accrochés au mur tant leur surface vibre, comme pixélisée. Si ce ne sont nos yeux qui louchent, alors l’image elle-même doit être atteinte d’une déformation. La photographie des panneaux imprimée à même son sujet, le bois, fait tressaillir l’objet. L’image ne se superpose pas correctement à sa source, le croisement des deux produisant une malformation qui rend tangible leur relation. Cette présence fantomatique, créée par le dédoublement et donc la disparition de l’intégrité de la surface capturée, Jacob Kassay – ancien étudiant en photographie à l’université de Buffalo – l’explorait d’ores et déjà au sein de You, sa précédente exposition à la galerie Art: Concept. Ici, la réitération siamoise de l’objet dans ses propres contours, et la redondance des panneaux dans l’espace produit un effet de « jamais vu », ce phénomène d’épuisement qui nous empêche de reconnaître des formes ou des mots pourtant rabâchés. Dans le règne de la compression de l’image, le choix de ce bois « aggloméré » prend tout son sens. An aggloméré is an aggloméré is an aggloméré. La matière s’en trouve déréalisée.

L’aggloméré borde nos habitations et gît sur les chantiers, futur toit ou plancher. Il est ainsi troublant d’expérimenter, face à la solidité des panneaux, un désagrègement visuel propre au digital. On pense alors aux modélisations d’espace, aux décors de jeux vidéos, comme ceux, domestiques, des SIMS. Ces murs ou ces meubles qu’il arrive – dans un bug accidentel ou provoqué – aux personnages de traverser. Leurs corps fusionnés dans les parois hachent les textures qui peinent toujours à se recomposer en trois dimensions. Mettre le pied dans le décor, c’est ce qu’invitent à faire les deux sculptures métalliques incrustées dans les murs et intitulées Footrest. Généralement le repose-pied, incliné et placé sous le bureau, permet d’améliorer la posture face à l’écran, comme si par extension il soulageait d’une fatigue engendrée par les images digitales. Par le pied, ces sculptures en creux réintroduisent l’échelle humaine et l’ancrage physique au milieu de ce paysage pixélisé créé par l’oeil anonyme et défectueux d’une lentille d’appareil photo.

Et c’est d’ailleurs à un fameux corps en mouvement, le Nu descendant l’escalier (1912) de Marcel Duchamp, qu’un des panneaux fait référence par l’adoption d’un format quasi similaire. La référence signale qu’au-delà du régime digital auquel on imputerait la déformation de ces images accrochées au mur, une vieille querelle entre la peinture et la photographie, à propos de la représentation du mouvement, continue de se jouer. Inspiré par le rendu d’un déplacement par la chronophotographie, Marcel Duchamp (2) avait peint dans ces « couleurs bois » un corps en copeaux différemment orientés pour suggérer la descente d’un modèle nu. Dans F’O’O’T’A’G’E’, le sujet continue de bouger, cette fois mis en mouvement par le rapprochement inexorable des deux pupilles d’un chat siamois.

Écrit par Elsa Vettier.

(1) Oriented strand board ou en français : panneau à grandes particules orientées.
(2) On pense également aux Rotoreliefs de 1935 – des disques en carton devant être placés sur des tourne-disques – qui traduisaient l’intérêt de Marcel Duchamp pour l’art optique et sa volonté d’introduire le mouvement dans la peinture ainsi que de la « capter » cinématographiquement.

ART : CONCEPT
4 Passage Sainte-Avoye, 75003 Paris (entrée 8 rue Rambuteau)
www.galerieartconcept.com

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30/05/20

Antony Gormley @ Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris - In Habit

Antony Gormley: In Habit
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris
Jusqu'au 20 juin 2020
« Nous vivons simultanément dans trois endroits : le corps, le monde construit et notre planète. Le deuxième corps —le monde construit— est celui qui prend de plus en plus de contrôle sur nous. En concevant un habitus en rapport à un habitat, nous renforçons, à travers l'habitude, des modes de comportement qui à la fois nous protègent et nous séparent de la vie immédiate du corps, ainsi que de la vie cosmique de notre planète. » Antony Gormley (2020)
La Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac présente In Habit, une nouvelle exposition de sculptures et d’oeuvres sur papier d’Antony Gormley articulée autour d’une installation dynamisant l'espace. Constituée d’un simple tube d’aluminium carré déployé en continu, Run II cherche à éveiller notre conscience sur la manière dont nous nous déplaçons dans notre habitat construit. Les sections qui serpentent à 90 degrés activent et dynamisent l'espace principal de la galerie. Les sections horizontales nous rappellent la hauteur d’objets qui nous sont familiers dans notre environnement construit, celle d’une chaise ou d’une table, d’un plan de travail, d’une étagère, d’une porte ou d’un plafond.

Run II se déploie librement à travers la galerie, et interagissant avec  l'oeuvre, notre corps peut reconnaître ces formes et s’affranchir de ce que les Japonais appellent ‘la culture de la chaise’, en opposition à la ‘culture du sol’. Run II est donc, selon Antony Gormley « une zone de réflexivité dans laquelle la lumière, l'air, le volume et notre biomasse s’accordent dans un jeu de géométrie orthogonale qui reste libre. » En nous invitant à devenir nous-mêmes, c’est-à-dire des figures ancrées dans le sol, nous devenons nous-mêmes la personne qui est vue par les autres spectateurs et, ce faisant, nous pouvons utiliser l'espace de l'art comme un champ d’émergence. Gormley nous invite à nous arrêter et à repenser notre dépendance vis-à-vis de ce second habitat, celui « du corps de l'architecture », et à créer une conscience du sol lui-même, afin de nous y ancrer.

Dans son essai pour le catalogue de l’exposition, l’historien de l’art, Jonathan Wood revient sur cette nouvelle oeuvre : « Il n'est pas difficile de considérer Run II comme un tournant important dans la sculpture de Gormley... Un détachement du corps de l'artiste pour se tourner vers celui du spectateur. Run II s’inscrit aussi, il faut le dire, dans une continuité : l’oeuvre étend la portée d'un projet sculptural plus global qui s'est progressivement développé au cours des quarante dernières années,  avec pour élément central le corps humain —tant celui de l'artiste que celui du spectateur. C'est cette quête constante et inachevée qui donne à l'oeuvre de Gormley sa place unique dans l'histoire de la sculpture. »

Pour accompagner cette oeuvre de grande envergure conçue spécifiquement pour cet espace, Gormley présente une série d'oeuvres en fonte à échelle humaine intitulée Liners. Celles-ci sont constituées de simples lignes droites ouvertes, de lignes multiples et de lignes qui n’ont ni début ni fin. Elles explorent le volume intérieur du corps humain et rappellent le plan de métro londonien. Comme Run II, ces oeuvres sont également considérées par Antony Gormley comme des « instruments de diagnostic » qui s’évertuent à nous repositionner dans notre habitat naturel, c’est-à-dire notre corps : « Je ne veux pas illustrer une émotion ou une sensation, mais ces cartes rouillées pourraient être activées par la projection de ce que l'on ressent dans certaines positions; en se tenant debout sur les épaules de quelqu’un dans le cas de Fill ; en se tenant allongé sur le côté pour Level ; ou en équilibre sur les fesses tout en soulevant la tête et les pieds pour Float. Dans le cas de Nest, la sensation de notre relation avec la terre lorsque l’on se tient en équilibre sur nos pieds en serrant nos jambes aussi fort que possible contre notre corps. » A l'étage inférieur, deux Framers délicats font allusion à l'espace corporel en tant qu’espace architectural, et sont accompagnés d'une sélection de dessins spatiaux.

Pour Antony Gormley, la sculpture à l’ère numérique possède la capacité unique de nous renvoyer à une expérience primordiale et peut devenir le terrain sur lequel nos perceptions internes oubliées de notre être-au-monde pourrait nous amener à reconnecter avec nous-mêmes et avec notre planète. 

Un catalogue avec des textes du géographe Michel Lussault et de l’historien d’art Jonathan Wood a été publié à l’occasion de l’exposition. 

GALERIE TADDAEUS ROPAC
7 rue de Belleville, 75003 Paris
ropac.net
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26/05/20

Mary Ellen Bartley @ Yancey Richardson Gallery, NYC (Online) - 7 Things Again And Again

Mary Ellen Bartley: 7 Things Again And Again
Yancey Richardson Gallery, New York (Online)
May 21 - June 20, 2020

Yancey Richardson presents 7 Things Again and Again, an online exhibition of new still life photographs by Mary Ellen Bartley made each day during the month of April. A portion of the proceeds from the sales of 7 Things Again and Again will go to benefit the God’s Love We Deliver Covid-19 Emergency Fund. Known for her exploration of the tactile and formal qualities of books, Mary Ellen Bartley was in the midst of her residency at Giorgio Morandi’s studio and library in Bologna, Italy when the pandemic began. As Italy shutdown, she returned to her home in Sag Harbor, New York to shelter-in-place. There, Mary Ellen Bartley assigned herself a project inspired by Morandi’s process of reduction, repetition and restraint as a vehicle for meditation and introspection. Mary Ellen Bartley chose a set of seven common household items, and committed to photographing them each day for the thirty days of April. 

Mary Ellen Bartley's attic studio became a refuge from the anxiety gripping the world, where her seven elements remained recognizable but were detached from their everyday function, serving instead as an exploration of form and process. Experimenting with exposure, depth of focus and subtle variations in light and shadow, Mary Ellen Bartley transformed the quotidian objects into moments of stilled time. In addition to these quietly contained compositions, Mary Ellen Bartley experimented with veiling the objects, re-photographing her images, or recombining portions of prints into new compositions, pushing the imagery further toward abstraction. The hushed tranquility and containment of the resulting images speak to our current moment, of a world on pause.

YANCEY RICHARDSON
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
www.yanceyrichardson.com

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25/05/20

Potential World 1 @ Migros Museum, Zurich - Planetery Memories

Potential Worlds 1: Planetary Memories
Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich
Through October 11, 2020

Monira Al Qadiri, Maria Thereza Alves, Alberto Baraya, Ursula Biemann, Carolina Caycedo, Cooking Sections, Mark Dion, Mishka Henner, Reena Saini Kallat, Kiluanji Kia Henda, Jakob Kudsk Steensen, Almagul Menlibayeva, Katja Novitskova, Tabita Rezaire, Zina Saro-Wiwa, Himali Singh Soin

Ursula Biemann
URSULA BIEMANN
Subatlantic, 2015 
Videostill
Sammlung Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst

Potential Worlds 1: Planetary Memories is the first in a series of two exhibitions that explore the relationship between humans and nature. The works on view in both exhibitions scrutinize the human impact on the planet and sketch potential future scenarios for life on Earth. Climate change and other phenomena are evidence that human activities are affecting the planet; the repercussions are visible and tangible. Faced with this urgent concern, we need to question our own actions and ways of thinking. That is the point of departure for the art on display in the exhibition Potential Worlds 1: Planetary Memories. The works shed light on forms of the appropriation of the natural world in the pursuit of power and resources. They point up the consequences for the environment as well as the social fabric and question conceptions in the natural sciences that were developed in the course of the power-driven appropriation of nature. Incorporating critical analysis, wide-ranging research, and creative solutions, they also underscore the potentials for coexistence on our planet and show that it is possible to devise and enact a new form of communal life on Earth.

The dynamics of the appropriation as well as destruction of the natural environment are one recurrent theme of the exhibition. The works undertake an acute critique of these dynamics and point up potential avenues of resistance. One major concern is the industrial processing and exploitation of natural resources, as in oil production. In this connection, URSULA BIEMANN (b. 1955) examines the global ramifications of climate change. Her video Deep Weather (2013) combines footage shot in tar sand landscapes in Canada from which petroleum is mined with material showing Bangladeshis building a levee to protect their land from flooding. Reflecting on some of the causes and effects of climate change, the artist’s work draws attention to interconnections between the planet’s ecosystems and raises awareness of the political responsibilities. MONIRA AL QADIRI (b. 1983) studies the impact of the oil industry on the culture of the countries along the Persian Gulf. Her sculptural abstractions of oil drilling heads visualize the displacement of the region’s pearl fishers by oil production.

Monira Al Qadiri
MONIRA AL QADIRI
OR–BIT 1, 2016; Spectrum 1, 2016
Courtesy the artist

Photo: Lorenzo Pusterla

Monira Al Qadiri
MONIRA AL QADIRI
Divine Memory, 2019
Videostill
Courtesy the artist

The artists ZINA SARO-WIWA (b. 1976) and CAROLINA CAYCEDO (b. 1978) explore forms of resistance and reactions to the destruction and privatization of the natural environment. In her video installation Karikpo Pipeline (2015), Zina Saro-Wiwa turns the spotlight on the extraction of oil from the ground beneath the Niger Delta. Oil production began in the 1950s, with dramatic consequences for the environment and the area’s people, the Ogoni, who were given no say on the regulations governing the oil industry’s drilling operations. The oil pipelines crisscrossing the Ogoni’s land serve as the setting of the video installation. Dancers and acrobats perform on the pipes. Their movements and masks are derived from the Karikpo dance, a traditional form in Ogoni culture. Karikpo Pipeline examines how people live with the debris left behind by ecological destruction and calls for forms of interaction with the environment rooted in cultural traditions. Carolina Caycedo’s project Be Dammed (2012–) highlights the devastating effects of hydroelectric dams on rivers and the way the privatization of water has ravaged communities and ecosystems. The artist’s focus is on the environment along rivers in Latin and North America and the political and performative activism of advocates for an environmentally and socially conscious use of hydroelectric power.

Like the resources that humans exploit for energy generation, the ecological impact of agriculture is a major area of concern in the exhibition. MISHKA HENNER's (b. 1976) prints visualize the impact of industrialized architecture and resource extraction. They are based on satellite photographs the artist found online and show large feedlots as well as oil fields. Yet they also bring abstract paintings to mind: Mishika Henner’s works illustrate how abstract and inconceivable the dimensions of agriculture and the industrial use of land have become. Agrarian culture also figures prominently in the work of the artist duo COOKING SECTIONS (2015–). Its point of departure is the French colonization of Algeria and the competition between the two countries’ winemakers. The artists scrutinize the labels under which cheeses and wines are sold and the classification of products as «natural» or «national». REENA SAINI KALLAT (b. 1973) addresses territorial conflicts: her art visualizes a landscape in which nature serves as the symbolic model of a world that has overcome national borders and interstate conflicts over resources. Each work unites two animal or plant species that are considered national symbols in states separated by disputed boundaries.

Mark Dion
MARK DION 
The Library for the Birds of Zürich, 2016/2020
Sammlung Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst
Photo: Lorenzo Pusterla

Mark Dion
MARK DION
The Library for the Birds of Zürich, 2016/2020, Detail
Sammlung Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst
Photo: Lorenzo Pusterla

Mark Dion
MARK DION
The Library for the Birds of Zürich, 2016/2020, Detail
Sammlung Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst
Photo: Lorenzo Pusterla

In light of the human appropriation of nature, the works in the exhibition inquire into ways to gather and disseminate knowledge of nature when humans believe themselves to be in a position of dominance. In his installation The Library for the Birds of Zürich (2016/20), MARK DION (b. 1961) has gathered assorted books on ornithology in a large cage. The library is indeed one for the birds, and so live zebra finches and canaries flit about. The books are complemented by bird-hunters’ implements. The artist shows that the history of the natural sciences is inextricably intertwined with the history of man’s dominion over animals. At the same time, his work reveals the idea of making a gift to birds of the knowledge that humans have accumulated about their origins to be an absurd and presumptuous endeavor: the birds inhabit the cage in accordance with the laws of their own existence. KILUANJI KIA HENDA’s (b. 1979) humorous video Havemos de Voltar/We shall return (2017) portrays the giant sable antelope, which is also the national symbol of Angola, and lends it a voice. The video shows the animal, whose species is critically endangered, coming to life in an Angolan archive. It yearns to break free, return to nature, and escape its «fate» as a foil for human projections and object in a historical exhibition. This desire is framed in analogy with a poem by Angola’s first president after the downfall of the Portuguese colonial order, in which he expresses his fervent wish for genuine independence. The artist ALBERTO BARAYA’s (b. 1968) project Herbario de Plantas Artificiales (Herbarium of Artificial Plants) (2001–) is concerned with the figure of the traveling explorer and botanist as well as botanical classifications. It takes inspiration from itinerant scientists of the seventeenth through nineteenth centuries, whose voyages of discovery in the name of science served to legitimize Western claims to territorial rule; colonial structures conversely subsidized their research. Alberto Baraya collects artificial rather than living plants, classifying his specimens in handwritten notes. With his artificial flowers, the artist offers an ironic take on the heroic figure of the adventurer, whose ostensible scientific objectivity he calls in question. HIMALI SINGH SOIN’s (b. 1987) video takes the viewer to the Arctic and Antarctic regions and their mythologies, ecology, and history for a reflection on the widespread fear in nineteenth-century England that an ice age was imminent. Suffused with a magical atmosphere, the work combines documentary and historic footage with an imaginary world in which a figure is seen wandering through barren icebound sceneries.

MARIA THEREZA ALVES
Seeds of Change: New York–A Botany of Colonization, 2017
Courtesy the artist and Galerie Michel Rein, Paris/Brussels
Photo: Lorenzo Pusterla


Tabita Rezaire
TABITA REZAIRE
Deep Down Tidal, 2017
Courtesy the artist and Goodman Gallery, Cape Town/Johannesburg/London
Photo: Lorenzo Pusterla

The exhibition raises the question not only of how and in which contexts knowledge about nature was generated—but also of how much nature has to say about humans. The artist MARIA THEREZA ALVES (b. 1961) retraces the trajectories of plants that merchants and slave traders unwittingly transported to new habitats on their ships, propagating them across the planet as witnesses to human migration. Her installation presents a collection of geographical ephemera as well as plants that found their way from European ports to New York. Where Maria Thereza Alves’s work lets plants attest to human history, TABITA REZAIRE (b. 1989) conceives of the ocean as a repository of memories of human action. Her video Deep Down Tidal (2017) traces the submarine cables that were laid across the ocean floors to tie the entire world together in a single network—and, as it turns out, follow the routes of the erstwhile transatlantic slave trade. The artist shines a light on the history and geography of technological infrastructures that sprawl over the planet and become part of the environment.

Jakob Kudsk Steensen
JAKOB KUDSK STEENSEN
RE-ANIMATED, 2018/2019,
VR Installation, VR Screenshot
Courtesy the artist


Almagul Menlibayeva
ALMAGUL MENLIBAYEVA
Astana.Departure, 2016-2019
Videoinstallation/ video installation, Videostill,
Courtesy American-Eurasian Art Advisors LLC

One question that is pervasive in the exhibition is how humanity’s presence becomes imprinted on the Earth—and what the long-term consequences may be. The works also asks how past histories of the environment will be narrated and recalled in the future—and which forms of life might yet come into being. In his virtual-reality installation RE-ANIMATED (2018–19), the artist JAKOB KUDSK STEENSEN (b. 1987) brings the Kauaʻi ʻŌʻō, an extinct bird, back to life as a digital avatar, releasing it into the wild on a replica of the Hawaiian island of Kauai that visitors are invited to discover using VR goggles. The artist designs a virtual world in which we can digitally reconstruct and recollect lost and destroyed formations of nature, envisioning nothing less than the reanimation his title proclaims. Where Jakob Kudsk Steensen replicates nature and lends it new form, KATJA NOVITSKOVA fabricates creatures inspired by biotechnology and science whose nature remains to be determined. ALMAGUL MENLIBAYEVA (b. 1969), meanwhile, uses the urban planning of Kazakhstan’s capital Astana (recently renamed Nur Sultan), a rapidly growing city surrounded by steppes, as a springboard for an investigation of technological and architectural visions for the future. Her work transposes footage exploring the urban fabric of Nur Sultan into a new thematic context by combining it with images from the cosmodrome in the Kazakh town of Baikonur. The spaceport and the rockets that lift off from it result in space debris that damages the environment. Devising a distinctive futuristic visual idiom, the artist examines the pollution generated by aeronautics while also speculating that our planet may become unlivable, its land surfaces blighted with human structures.

Katja Novitskova
KATJA NOVITSKOVA
Pattern of Activation (C. Elegans), 2020, featuring 
Approximation, 2012– ongoing, and 
Pattern of Activation (Embryogenesis), 2017 
Courtesy the artist and Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin 
Photo: Lorenzo Pusterla

The works in the exhibition shed light on histories and a possible future of the web of relationships between humans and nature, prompting searching reflections by asking: How do we perceive nature with our senses, and which means do we have to describe it? How do we live up to our responsibility for the planet? How do we imagine we will coexist on it? The second exhibition in the series, titled Potential Worlds 2: Eco-Fictions, will build on these questions in a speculative exploration of novel forms of life and community and the constantly shifting roles that humans play in an age of cutting-edge post-human technologies.

The exhibition was curated by HEIKE MUNDER (director Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst) and SUAD GARAYEVA-MALEKI (director YARAT Contemporary Art Space). The show will be on view at YARAT Contemporary Art Space, Baku from November 13 until February 21, 2021.

An accompanying publication with essays by Benjamin H. Bratton, T. J. Demos, Suad Garayeva-Maleki & Heike Munder, Reza Negarestani and Jussi Parikka, as well as short texts by Milena Bürge, Anna Fech and Rabea Kaczor will be released in the summer of 2020.

MIGROS MUSEUM FÜR GEGENWARTSKUNST
Limmatstrasse 270, 8005 Zürich
migrosmuseum.ch

19/05/20

Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power @ Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Soul of a Nation: 
Art in the Age of Black Power
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Through July 19, 2020

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, presents Soul of a Nation: Art in the Age of Black Power, featuring work by more than 60 Black artists created over two revolutionary decades in American history. The exhibition, organized by Tate Modern in London, is on view at the MFAH as the final presentation of the three-year tour. The Museum is also present a related film series during the run of the exhibition.

Exhibition Overview
Soul of a Nation explores what it meant to be a Black artist in America during the tumultuous era that spanned the 1960s and the Civil Rights movement to the early 1980s and the emergence of identity politics. Organized into 13 sections, the exhibition features artists from across the United States, with a special emphasis on aligned groups that evolved in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, and another focus on the work of artist Betye Saar. The MFAH presentation adds a section featuring a number of works from the Museum’s permanent collection to spotlight Houston’s vital Black American art scene during this period. Artists featured in this section include John Biggers, Kermit Oliver, and Carroll Harris Simms, all of whom contributed to the dynamic local arts scene.

Spiral
The exhibition opens with the work of the Spiral group, a New York–based collective of 15 artists who formed in response to the August 1963 March on Washington, which drew nearly a quarter of a million people and marked a critical turning point in the Civil Rights movement. These artists, who include Charles Alston, Emma Amos, Romare Bearden, and Norman Lewis, regularly met from 1963 to 1965 to discuss the concept of a “Black aesthetic,” creating powerful work, both abstract and figurative, in response to the Civil Rights movement, and later, calls for Black Power. Norman Lewis’s painting Processional (1965) is an abstract evocation of the Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, march led by Martin Luther King Jr. in early 1965, which was violently dispersed by a police assault. The Spiral group organized one exhibition of their work, all in a black-and-white palette. Later, Black artists would look to Spiral, impressed both by the group’s determination to exhibit together in an artist-run space and by the range of artistic viewpoints of its members.

Black Power
In the mid-1960s, painting and sculpture became powerful vehicles to protest violence against peaceful activism, as well as to echo calls for Black Power from Stokely Carmichael and other leaders of that movement. The haunting imagery of Archibald Motley’s painting The First One Hundred Years: He Amongst You Who Is Without Sin Shall Cast the First Stone; Forgive Them Father for They Know Not What They Do (c. 1963–72) calls up a Klansman’s burning cross, the Crucifixion, and a lynching, while the figures of Martin Luther King Jr. and presidents Abraham Lincoln and John Kennedy hover in a spectral haze. Elizabeth Catlett’s wooden sculpture Black Unity (1968) depicts a monumental raised fist while the reverse side shows two placid visages side-by-side, communicating strength in Black collectivity.

Art on the Street
Excluded from mainstream museum and gallery spaces, Black artists in the late 1960s sought out and created venues to present their work, taking their art to the streets and other alternative spaces. Operating well beyond conventional spaces, these artists inspired and mobilized Black and local audiences. In 1967, the Organization of Black American Culture (OBAC), a group of artists and writers in Chicago, created The Wall of Respect, an outdoor mural on the city’s South Side. The wall and its images of “Black Heroes”—civic leaders, writers, musicians, sports stars, and dancers—became a gathering place for poetry readings, music, and performances. The project sparked a wave of murals in Black neighborhoods nationwide.

Watts and After
On August 11, 1965, a Los Angeles police officer pulled over a Black motorist in the Watts neighborhood of L.A. The struggle that ensued during her arrest became the spark that ignited long-simmering neighborhood anger, escalating into a conflict with local police and six days of violence that left 34 dead and a neighborhood in ruins. Following the Watts Rebellion, many artists took it upon themselves to restore their community through public art projects, incorporating found objects and detritus in artistic responses to the conflict. Noah Purifoy’s assemblage Watts Riot (1966), made from collaged debris, was first shown in 66 Signs of Neon, an exhibition that took place in Watts. In the catalogue, Purifoy wrote that “the ultimate purpose of this effort was to demonstrate to the community of Watts, to Los Angeles, and to the world at large, that education through creativity is the only way left for a person to find himself through this materialistic world.”

AfriCOBRA
The artist collective AfriCOBRA (African Commune of Bad Relevant Artists) formed in Chicago in 1968; its founding members included Jeff Donaldson and Wadsworth Jarrell. The group’s 1970 manifesto declared a uniquely Black art movement based on a shared sensibility, one that diverged from American and European models of Pop Art, Realism, and Abstraction. “The new aesthetic was based on ‘rhythm,’ ‘shine ... the rich luster of a just-washed ’fro...’ and ‘Color color Color color that shines, color that is free of rules and regulations.” Wadsworth Jarrell’s vibrant Angela Davis portrait Revolutionary (1971), composed from snippets of transcripts from Davis’ speeches, and Jae Jarrell’s 1970 Brothers Surrounding Sis, a hand-painted dress representing protection and solidarity, are featured in this section.

Black Light
Roy DeCarava was one of the first Black photographers to establish a successful career as an independent artist rather than as a photojournalist or studio portraitist. For many, his extraordinary handling of a dark tonal range amounted to a Black aesthetic in photography, as did his choice of subject matter. DeCarava photographed leaders associated with the Civil Rights movement, but he was equally drawn to jazz musicians and everyday people in New York City’s traditionally Black neighborhoods of Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant. DeCarava also served as the first director of the Kamoinge Workshop, a group of Black photographers in Harlem who came together in 1963 to discuss the presence and visibility of Black American photography and to support mutual development. Several images by the younger members, such as Adger Cowans, Herb Robinson, and Ming Smith, are also on view in this section, demonstrating a wide range of stylistic approaches that promoted a positive counterpoint to negative or naive images and written impressions of Harlem.

Three Graphic Artists
This section reunites the work of three Los Angeles artists who took independent approaches to the graphic image and were featured in the 1971 exhibition Three Graphic Artists at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA): veteran painter and printmaker Charles White, and the accomplished, but at the time emerging, artists David Hammons and Timothy Washington. Each of the artists depicts the human form in innovative ways in response to social and political events of the time. White was by far the most renowned of the three. Here, his work is represented by an oil wash from his Wanted series, based on Civil War–era notices of runaway slaves and large-scale drawings of expertly rendered figures that emphasize cast shadow and volume. A selection of Hammons’s body prints, which he initiated by coating himself in margarine or cooking fat and pressing his body onto printing paper, are also here. Washington is represented by his celebrated drypoint etchings, presented on their aluminum plates as completed objects.

Houston
This gallery explores the work of Houston artists, displaying powerful representations of the figure and experimentation with surface and form, and showcasing the legacy of gifted and generous mentors. In the 1950s, painter and printmaker John Biggers and sculptor Carroll Harris Simms established an art program at what is now Texas Southern University. They went on to educate several generations of students not only in the principles of art making, but also in ways to express self-pride and self-identity. Biggers and Simms are represented by drawings, paintings, and ceramics, alongside the work of one of their most noted protégés, Kermit Oliver, whose evocative, superbly drafted scenes allude to spiritual and personal mythologies.

East Coast Abstraction
Based in New York and Washington, D.C., the seven artists in this section exhibited together in the late 1960s and early 1970s. But their personal experiences and inclinations manifested themselves in various ways. Sam Gilliam and Jack Whitten created abstract homages to Civil Rights leaders and experiences. Peter Bradley and Ed Clark suffused brushed or sprayed color across large-scale canvases. Daniel LaRue Johnson’s sculptures and Virginia Jaramillo’s paintings feature precise bands and lines that cut across vivid painted color fields. William T. Williams connected his compositions and processes to the radical improvisation of jazz, as shown in Trane (1969), titled after John Coltrane and depicting the cascades of sound in Coltrane’s music.

Black Heroes
Here, portraits of boxers, writers, and painters are displayed together under the concept of the “Black Hero,” which was introduced to artists by OBAC in Chicago in 1967 with The Wall of Respect and defined as “any person who honestly erects the beauty of Black life and genius in his or her style; does not forget his Black brothers and sisters who are less fortunate; does what he does in such an outstanding manner that he or she cannot be imitated or replaced.” This concept prompted artists to paint powerful images not only of famous Black Americans, but also of everyday people. Emma Amos’s painting Eva the Babysitter (1973) honored the woman who helped enable Amos’s artistic practice by babysitting; Barkley Hendricks depicted friends in imagery that appears to come to life on the canvas; and Raymond Saunders paid tribute to heavyweight boxing champion Jack Johnson.

Improvisation and Experimentation
In the early 1970s, Black artists moved away from the conventions of abstract painting and sculpture, and began experimenting with materials and forms. For some artists and critics, this commitment to improvisation and experimentation connected to Black Americans’ ambitions for political freedom. Artists looked back to a history of oppression while celebrating present-day community. Joe Overstreet’s We Came from There to Get Here (1970) features a colorful grid and the outlines of figures giving gestures of empowerment. The canvas is suspended in a way that for the artist suggests a tent as well as the specter of lynching: “I made this art you could hang any place. I felt like a nomad myself, with all the insensitivity in America.” The title and colors of Overstreet’s work indicate a movement from oppression toward freedom. The ghostly outlines of continents in Frank Bowling’s “Map Paintings,” which use stencils of world maps to explore color as its own subject, do not privilege any particular place, but celebrate a more fluid and open idea of identity and belonging to the world. Bold colors characterize Alma Thomas’s paintings, made following a NASA mission to Mars, and former NASA engineer Fred Eversley experimented with casting polyester resin to create his signature “lenses,” translucent discs of radiant color.

Betye Saar
In October 1973, the first survey show of Los Angeles–based Betye Saar opened at the Fine Arts Gallery at California State University. This section re-creates one aspect of Betye Saar: Selected Works 1964–1973 through nine works. Inspired by her experience several years earlier with the Field Museum’s collections of African and Oceanic art, Saar began to invest her work with references to ancestral connectedness, ritual objects, and spiritual power. The works on view here, including Nine Mojo Secrets (1971) and Eshu (The Trickster) (1971), marked a fundamental turning point in Saar’s art making.

Just Above Midtown
This section is an homage to the gallery Just Above Midtown, active from late 1974 until 1986, which was founded by Linda Goode Bryant, a former director of education at the Studio Museum in Harlem. The gallery recognized the work being made by Black artists and provided a platform for their art to be seen and sold, with a focus on artists making noncommercial, nonrepresentational work, including David Hammons, Senga Nengudi, and Lorraine O’Grady. Soul of a Nation concludes with photographs from a 1983 performance piece that O’Grady orchestrated for the African American Day parade in Harlem. The artist had 15 dancers carry gold-painted frames through the parade route and take photographs of various onlookers within the empty frames Some 400 images were taken over the course of the day, and 40 are featured in this exhibition. Titled Art Is …, the piece overturns the conventions of formal portraiture to celebrate and elevate everyday community.

“We are enormously privileged to serve as the final venue for this landmark exhibition, which has received tremendous acclaim since its debut in London for its path-breaking exploration of the art of this pivotal era," said Gary Tinterow, director, the Margaret Alkek Williams Chair, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

“I am especially thrilled to be able to highlight the work of Houston artists in the final presentation of this exhibition,” said Kanitra Fletcher, assistant curator, Modern and Contemporary Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. “This new section contributes to a more comprehensive representation of Black American art during the same era, and celebrates an important legacy of art making in Texas.”

This exhibition is organized by Tate Modern, London, in collaboration with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville; Brooklyn Museum, New York; The Broad, Los Angeles; and the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.

MFAH - MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS, HOUSTON
1001 Bissonnet, Houston, TX 77005
mfah.org

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18/05/20

Sturtevant @ Peder Lund, Oslo

Sturtevant
Peder Lund, Oslo
Through June 20, 2020

Peder Lund presents works from the iconic Warhol Flowers series by the American artist STURTEVANT (1924-2014). Sturtevant created one of the most interesting oeuvres in the 20th century. By following a unique approach that consisted of creating stunning repetitions of the artworks of her contemporaries and presenting them consciously as independent works, she questioned the foundations of our understanding of art and her oeuvre confronts us with a fundamental expansion to Duchamp’s concept of the readymade. The show includes 19 unique works from the 1970s that have never been shown in Scandinavia before.

STURTEVANT, Warhol Flowers, 1970
STURTEVANT
Warhol Flowers, 1970
© Estate Sturtevant, courtesy Peder Lund

STURTEVANT, Warhol Flowers, 1970
STURTEVANT
Warhol Flowers, 1970
© Estate Sturtevant, courtesy Peder Lund

STURTEVANT, Warhol Flowers, 1970
STURTEVANT
Warhol Flowers, 1970
© Estate Sturtevant, courtesy Peder Lund

While some of her repetitions were essentially exact copies of the artworks she chose to work with, others were recreated manually from memory. Through the artistry of Sturtevant’s detailed repetitions, the works she referred to can be easily identified, but their meaning was far from being a simple duplication, as her intention was never to create just a close resemblance, but to explore through her work topics such as authorship, authenticity, and originality. Issues that are of the highest relevance in our digital age, which is defined by the endless stream of images and their recombination.

Starting in the early 1960s, Sturtevant created in half a century an impressive body of work that challenged the viewer to look closely and think about the social and historical context of art. During her lifetime, Sturtevant’s work was met with much resistance and, similar to other great female artists, her oeuvre was only first truly given recognition in the last decades of her life. Sturtevant began her career in New York, where she studied at the Art Students League, an art school that has been historically known for its broad appeal to both amateurs and professional artists. Among the alumni of this school are many artists who became key figures of Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, such as Cy Twombly, Roy Lichtenstein, and Robert Rauschenberg. This vibrant environment was an important source of inspiration for Sturtevant’s work and some of her fellow students became close friends and sometime collaborators.

Her first solo exhibition at the Bianchini Gallery in 1965 featured her versions of artists' works that we now see as icons of their time. It demonstrated her remarkable ability to repeat important artworks shortly after their creation, and it is clear that Sturtevant had a keen sense for quickly analyzing the qualities of an artwork and its cultural reception. Among the exhibited works were, for example, repetitions of Andy Warhol’s silkscreened flowers, which he had only started to produce in 1964 and a colorful, concentric square from Frank Stella's Benjamin Moore series which he had begun in 1961.

While some of her contemporaries were offended, other artists such as Rauschenberg and Warhol encouraged her to create repetitions of their work. Memorably, Warhol replied in an interview, in which he was asked about his process and technique, “I don’t know. Ask Elaine” (B. Arning, “Sturtevant,” Journal of Contemporary Art, vol. 2, no. 2, Fall/Winter 1989, p. 43). According to Sturtevant, Warhol had given her full access to his factory and allowed her to use the original silkscreen of his flower series. (Peter Eleey, Sturtevant – Double Trouble, Museum of Modern Art, 2014, p. 73)

Of course, Warhol's oeuvre is especially linked to Sturtevant's work since repetition, authenticity, and authorship are also key elements of his work, however his implementation clearly differed from Sturtevant's pursuit, as his quote perfectly illustrates. While Warhol's factory operated under the premise that he delivered the concept of the work to his assistants, who were then responsible for the work's execution, therefore his name became the brand. Conversely, it was of utmost importance for Sturtevant to execute the work herself. Hence, her flower series, for which she used the same technical tools, demonstrates perfectly that each work will nevertheless differ. In the same way as the products of Warhol's factory are original artworks because of the conceptual idea that lies within them, Sturtevant's works are absolutely unique, exactly because they depict the same thing but with a different meaning.

The fact that Sturtevant, as a woman artist, chose to repeat this particular series by Warhol, a decorative motif which is associated with beauty and femininity and for which he actually used an image of hibiscus flowers first taken by the photographer Patricia Caulfield, is significant. Her choice grappled with the notion that male artists have historically dominated art history and have had much better chances to be taken seriously by exploring and replicating the mundane motifs that Pop Art used. Even though Pop Art has an ironic element, it draws from the visual archive of a commercial culture; most artworks by men of this movement simply repeat the male gaze through which women were objectified - most often by being depicted as either the devoted housewife or a glamorous, seductive pin-up. Of course, female artists worked with this visual vocabulary, as well, and the second series that Sturtevant focused on when repeating Warhol's work used the famous portrait of Marilyn Monroe. The key difference is that the female artists re-appropriated images of their own gender. Hence, most of their works' intention came from a point of feministic empowerment that challenged the given social structures of this time.

Howevere, since her work was, of course, putting key values of the art system in question, many important gallerists, collectors, and curators avoided giving her work the attention it deserved. Considering this hostile climate, it is no surprise that Sturtevant chose to retreat from the art scene in 1974 for over a decade. During this time, appropriation became a widely accepted practice in art, and in hindsight, it is clear that Sturtevant’s work must have had a powerful influence on a younger generation of artists. Sherrie Levine, Louise Lawler, and Cindy Sherman became, for example, prominent figures of the Picture Generation and explored the constructed nature of images and the parameters that define the social reception of an artwork further.

In 1985, Sturtevant returned to an art world which had, in the time of her absence, slowly evolved, and she continued to repeat the works of the next generation of artists who were on the rise and in 2000, she expanded her methods and began to create new film and video-based works. In Sturtevant's career, her breakthrough came in 2004, with the major solo exhibition The Brutal Truth at The Museum für Moderne Kunst in Frankfurt. After this show, her influence finally began to be widely acknowledged and the demand for her work rose significantly. Many renowned museums started to feature her work prominently, including the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Kunsthalle Zürich, and the Serpentine Galleries in London. In 2011, she was honored with the Golden Lion for her lifetime achievement at the Venice Biennale, and in 2012, the Moderna Museet in Stockholm dedicated the retrospective Image Over Image to the artist. In 2013, she was awarded the Kurt Schwitters Prize for Lifetime Achievement by the Sprengel Museum, Hannover, Germany, and in November 2014, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, finally opened the first major institutional exhibition, entiltled Double Trouble, in the US, which travelled in the following year to Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, California. Tragically, the artists never got the chance to experience this recognition in her home country in its entirety, as she died in May 2014.

Born in Lakewood, Ohio in 1924 as Elaine Sturtevant, Sturtevant moved to New York in the early 1960s and decided to use only her last name as an artist name. Besides her artistic education, she earned a bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Iowa, followed by a master’s in the field from Teachers College of Columbia University. Later in her career, she held a professorship at MIT in Cambridge, Massachusetts. In 2014, Sturtevant died in Paris where she had lived since the beginning of the 1990s at the age of 89.

Works by Sturtevant are held by renowned public and private collections, including ARC, Paris; DAP, Paris; FRAC, Bretagne; MAMCO, Geneva, MOCA Los, Angeles; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Musée d’Art Moderne de la ville de Paris; Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Pinault Foundation; Secession, Vienna, Sintra Museum of Modern Art, Sintra; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Weimar Neues Museum, Weimar; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City, ZKM, Karlsruhe.

PEDER LUND
Tjuvholmen allé 27, 0252 Oslo
pederlund.no

10/05/20

Yun Choi @ DOOSAN Gallery Seoul - Where the Heart Goes

Yun Choi: Where the Heart Goes 
DOOSAN Gallery Seoul 
May 6 - 30, 2020 

DOOSAN Gallery Seoul presents Where the Heart Goes, a solo exhibition of YUN CHOI for DOOSAN Residency New York in 2019, Choi will be partaking in the residency in New York for 6 months from July to December 2020. 

Choi’s interest lies in cliché images and the sense of banality in the collective faith hidden behind such images. She captures and collects common and banal images that float around in the streets, public places and in popular culture, playing variations on them through her video, installation and performative works.

‘Where the heart goes’ is literal expression, one that is excessively mundane. The conventional notion in the word ‘heart’ gives the expression a sense of steadfastness and purity. However, in reality, the way the heart goes is at times fickle and temporal. Choi explores this space in between such cliché notion and what lies on the other side, accumulating the strange and uncanny responses and sensations that arise in such space. In Where the Heart Goes, Choi ‘posts’ and ‘updates' her works previously shown in various exhibitions since her solo show in 2017. 

The exhibition space is partitioned like an office and staged like a public building, divided into the space of ‘post’ on the wall and space of ‘update’ on the floor. Choi captures how visual power is internalized and decorated in the various posts found in subways, public offices, libraries and online communities. In between the walls of such posts, the small sculptures that take off from Choi’s works renewed themselves, enlarging into ‘vertebrates’ in human size. Finally, endlessly repeated in the center of the exhibition space are the video work NoticeRevelationLaunchClock (2020), which omnidirectionally sends out infinite digital images, and the sound work Horror Eros Vulgar Spell (2020). 

The images, objects, videos and sounds summoned into the exhibition space by Choi have all been seen or heard at one time or another. But many things that may have had an important role at one point are no longer so obviously visible, or have become an annoying sound or an eyesore. Like the heart that’s simultaneously unconditional yet fickle, Choi revives and posts up the banal landscapes that are so typically Korean, inviting us to reflect on what our society is looking at and where it’s headed.

YUN CHOI (b. 1989) received B.F.A. and M.F.A. from Korea National University of Arts. She has held solo exhibitions at Art Sonje Center Project Space (2017, Seoul, Korea), and 153th Nuha-dong (2015, Seoul, Korea), and has participated in numerous group exhibitions at venues including Platform-L Contemporary Art Center (2019, Seoul, Korea), Art Sonje Center (2019, Seoul, Korea), Arko Art Center (2019, Seoul, Korea), TCAC (2019, Taipei, Taiwan), Sansumunhwa (2018, Seoul, Korea), Busan Biennale (2018, Busan, Korea), Gwangju Biennale Pavilion Project (2018, Gwangju, Korea), Buk-Seoul Museum of Art (2017, Seoul, Korea), Kukje Gallery (2019, Seoul, Korea), and Seoul Museum of Art (2016, Seoul, Korea), etc.  

DOOSAN Gallery Seoul
15, Jongno 33-gil, Jongno-gu, Seoul
doosanartcenter.com

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09/05/20

Jesper Nyrén @ Galerie Forsblom, Stockholm

Jesper Nyrén: Elements
Galerie Forsblom, Stockholm
Through June 5, 2020

Jesper Nyrén works methodically in his choice of color and composition. He initiates his art with impressions and studies of the nature in his surroundings and from that material the creative process starts in the studio. In his third solo exhibition at Galerie Forsblom, Jesper Nyrén returns to the grid of rectangles that appear in his previous works, but the mode of procedure differentiates slightly. In his new body of work, the fields are painted on a co-occurrent uniform background, as a ground zero. Jesper Nyrén has created a composition that is both sculptural and architectural, which at the same time has a light and airy expression.

With his technique of applying color Jesper Nyrén has created different types of materiality in the separate fields of the paintings. Having previously worked with several types of paint, such as oil and acrylics, mixed with for example sand to get a different texture, he has now created the contrasts solely by painting them. With the contrasting fields of density and surface, form and abstraction, Nyrén balances the tonality in the composition and creates a spatiality in his paintings. 

There is a fine line in estimating the placement of the different elements or building blocks; if the alignment shifts, they can collapse or break. Each entity is in need of the other parts and in that relation, between weight and weightlessness, there is a tension. The law of gravity is challenged – can the sky or the rendering of it, support the weight of the ocean or the earth?

The title of the exhibition, Elements, is important by its definition, the elements or the components allude to the composition in the paintings. The title also reflects a landscape in a period of time, affected by the season and the weather. For Jesper  Nyrén the most important thing is how the landscape and light emerge in the paintings. To render a light where the elements form an entity as a whole, and with that a recognition.

Jesper Nyrén (b. 1979) graduated from the Royal Institute of Art, Stockholm in 2007. He has been shown in solo exhibitions in the Nordic countries, including at Norrtälje Konsthall, as well as in numerous group exhibitions and at the Borås International Sculpture Biennial. He has been awarded The Swedish Art Committee working grant, 2018–2020 and the Baertling Scholarship, 2015. Jesper Nyrén has made several public installations, among those the Karolinska University Hospital, Solna, and the subway station Gullmarsplan in Stockholm. His works are represented in public collections at Åbo Art Museum, Finland, Västerås Art Museum, Public Art Agency, Sweden and in private collections.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Karlavägen 9, 114 24 Stockholm
galerieforsblom.com

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