MILAN.- Gió Marconi opened Cold Shoulders / Foreign Affairs / Seafood Dinners / Power Vacuums / and The Last Gate at the End of a Very Long Terminal, Matthew Brannons third solo show with the gallery.
I made this exhibition during the surreal year that was 2020. I imagined a plane hovering in mid-air above a city sometime during the last century. Light as a feather, heavy as a whale. Each artwork shows the seat of an unseen passenger. Its the set of a theatre production after the show is over and the cameras are off. Its the moment upon waking before you remember all you have to do. Its the center of a book I wrote long ago. Its a space for you to enter. The floating world. Matthew Brannon, New York City, March 2021
There it is. Out in the middle of the ocean. As barren as the moon. Down miles under cold and heavy water. Where few fish dwell and less plant life than a desert. Just very old rocks the size of mountains. It takes a great deal of force to propel the craft down and requires the sort of lights they use in massive stadiums and yet all you see is black. Like driving in a rainstorm in some outer-space nightmare. And then its there. Like a snake of prehistoric proportions. The worlds largest cobra. Able to devour mouthfuls of people. Glistening but dead. A huge extension cord running between the continents. Its the internet cable. And you do what you have to. What youve been dreaming of since it began. A way to save the world. A way to stop all the madness and distortion and impossibility. And when the ships huge jaws of life begin to hack at the outside its as if you hear the screams of all those houses full of all those devices bought online and totally dependent on this very blood youre now disrupting. Each giant slash into the cable cancels billions of emails and texts and downloads and uploads and streaming and even long deleted emails evaporate. And then like the sound of a glacier cracking or a crack in a wine glass in an empty room - its over. and the tension pulls both ends of the cable thousands of miles apart. Itll be easier to rebuild one than to reattach these. And everyone will need new passwords. And a generation will pass before its back up.
Matthew Brannon is an artist and a writer but is probably best known for his expansive approach to printmaking. He primarily works in silk screen and letterpress, both of which invite the playful juxtapostition of image and text. Literary sensibility, wit, the playful use of language as well as the fascination with psychoanalysis have long been key elements of Brannons oeuvre. From sculpture and painting to installation and video the artist treats each medium with the uttermost precision and with an extraordinary sense of detail.
For the last six years, Brannon has mostly been exploring the ramifications of the Vietnam War. The outcome is Concerning Vietnam, an ongoing series of more than 75 unique prints.
Brannons exhibition at the gallery is about the concept of travelling and the passage of time.
Ever since the world has come to a halt at the beginning of 2020 and worldwide lockdowns have kept people at home, the idea of traveling freely has become almost an obsession.
With his unique style, reminiscent of lifestyle magazines and advertisings from the mid-twentieth century, Brannon captures this particular current moment full of longing and nostalgia and translates it into densely coloured and detail-rich images.
The large black and white Classical Music canvas in the gallerys anteroom sets the stage for the rest of the show: one is going to travel in class and style. Last Gate at the end of a very long Terminal reads the sign above the entrance to the exhibition, serving both as a writing on the wall as well as a witty description of the status quo.
Inside the space, vibrantly-coloured plane interiors are on display: one large-scale piece on the front wall shows the planes cockpit whereas medium-sized works on each of the side walls depict several rows of seats.
Each of these compositions includes a seat, tray table and window with a birds eye view onto a night-time city. The unique silkscreen works are all forms of still lives full of varied objects and carefully researched details: expensive wine bottles clash with McDonalds paper bags, deodorants and toothpastes while chess pieces, playing cards, books and magazines speak of ones former traveling habits. Strange items such as an anatomical heart model, a box of bleach or a chunk of ham give the viewer a better idea of the travellers predilections and personality as do the various literary choices from Pasolini to crime and gossip novels. Telling but nevertheless enigmatic titles such as Wet Kisses, Dry Ideas; Mouth-to-Mouth; Double Negative or War Correspondent contribute to the story-telling aspect of Brannons practice.
Each piece on its own is not only a two-dimensional work of art but is also evocative of a short-story with an extravagant title and carefully outlined plot. All works combined feel like different chapters of a travelogue. Matthew Brannons skill to translate artworks into detail-rich stories is visible throughout the show. The boundaries between image and narration are fluent.
Matthew Brannon (b. 1971, St. Maries, Idaho) lives and works in New York City.
His work is in the permanent collections of numerous museums, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Denver Art Museum, Denver; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; DESTE Foundation for Contemporary Art, Athens; Museo Madre, Naples.
Brannon has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Marino Marini Museum, Florence (2013); Portikus, Frankfurt (2012); Museum M, Leuven (2010); Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria, New York (2007); Art Gallery of York University, Toronto (2007).
Group exhibitions include: Becoming American, San Juan Island National Historic Park, Friday Harbor, Washington (2018); Multiple Modernisms, Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk (2017); True Faith, Manchester Art Gallery, Manchester (2017); Trapping Lions in the Scottish Highlands, Aspen Art Museum, (2013); Brannon, Büttner, Kierulf, Kierulf, Kilpper, Bergen Kunsthall, Bergen (2012).