NEW YORK, NY.- Lévy Gorvy is presenting an online exhibition of twelve new ceramic works by Swiss artist Peter Regli. Generous in size and glazed with vivid hues, Reglis stoneware bowls transform functional vessels into sculpture. Known for his ambitious multi-media conceptual practice, the artist began making them over the past year, to serve as bases for large arrangements of fruits and vegetables in his home. Regli intends his new ceramic works to present food in ways that beguile the eye and mind, constantly changing as their contents are rearranged, consumed, and replenished.
Reglis New Ceramics is part of Reality Hacking, an ongoing series of sculptures and public interventions that the artist initiated in the 1990s. While the works in Reality Hacking vary widely, ranging from monumental installations of marble snowmen to small items of jewelry, they are united by a distinctive uncanniness. A recurring motif of the series is the effect of shapeshifting, manifested in such ephemeral subjects such as ghosts and melting snowmen that are rendered in permanent materials such as marble, bronze and clay. Regli continues to develop his concerns with metamorphosis through the pieces in Lévy Gorvys online exhibition, conceiving them as sites for ever-changing displays.
Regli first started working with clay while living next door to a tile-maker in Florida. Clay appeals to him for its immediacy and malleability, as well as for the manner in which it transforms unpredictably in the kiln. While revering the material for its earthy simplicity and long history, Regli approaches the medium with an impulse to bring something new into the world. This spirit is captured in a recent statement by the artist: For me, the material tells me to just go in some direction, he notes. Its like an adventure.
A portion of the proceeds from the sales of Reglis works will be donated to #FirstRespondersFirst, an initiative of Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Thrive Global, and the CAA Foundation, that helps provide essential protective equipment, accommodations, child care, food, mental health support, and other resources to first responder healthcare workers as they serve on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Peter Regli: New Ceramics is the second in an ongoing series of thematic, curated online presentations that Lévy Gorvy will feature over the course of the spring.