NEW YORK, NY.- Gagosian is presenting Execute, an exhibition of new paintings and a sculpture by Adam McEwen. This is the gallerys first solo exhibition of his work in New York.
The thrust of the exhibition hinges on the divergent meanings of its title: to carry out or act, on the one hand, and to extinguish or erase, on the other. McEwens work establishes a tension between these two countervailing forces: the optimistic impulse to act and grow, and the threat of oblivion.
The nexus of this tension lies in a sculpture installed at the exhibitions center. Titled Execution Block (2022), it is a slightly larger-than-life-size depiction of a medieval chopping block, complete with a worn slab on which to place the victims neck, an almost comically threatening axe, and the cobblestones of ye olde torture chamberall made with fiberglass, in the style of plastic childrens toys. Playful in kelly green and tree-house brown, it nevertheless exudes a thinly veiled menace. It begs several questionsamong them, Who is being beheaded? And who is doing the beheading?
Surrounding Execution Block are paintings of near human scale dominated by a palette in varying tones of gray acrylic paint. A group of these paintings portray metal springsdevices that suggest tension and its releasein the mode of schematic drawings. One of them, Compressed Spring #1 (2022), shows its subject squeezed down on itself, flattened. In another, Spring at Rest (2022), the coil sits at ease, only slightly constricted. Others are more openin the act of expanding, perhaps. To the extent that they imply rebounding, these paintings are optimistic. Their diagrammatic visual language brings to mind the deceptive simplicity of early Roy Lichtenstein or the mechanical drawings appropriated by the Dadaists. The paintings are made as carefully as they need to be, using straightforward methods involving pencil, ruler, and masking tape.
Rendered in a related style to the springs are images of an air conditioneran object McEwen has employed several times in his workand ballpoint pens. Taller than a tall person, and thinner, the pens evoke action, expression, and languagebut also, ordered in a column, troops marching. Like the springs, they are in motion, busy, taking in and expending energy. These objects analogize human emotions and actions: the springs alternately relaxed or tense and the ink levels of the pens revealing their potential lifespans.
An additional group of paintings interprets the style of sketched line drawings, fusing a sense of earnest, playful spontaneity with mordant wit. Representing an oncoming train, a boot departing the canvas, a cut tree sprouting new growth, and a written agenda, these paintings invoke themes of threat, escape, resilience, planning, and execution. Together with the exhibitions other works, they attempt to gauge the emotional temperature of the world into which they were recently brought.
In a separate gallery is Six Foot Two Eyes of Blue (2022), a geometric abstraction on a pair of circular canvases that is a surrogate for human presence, and perhaps self-portraiture. McEwen has also returned, for the first time in nearly a decade, to his ongoing series of obituaries of still-living people, paying homage to the climate activist Greta Thunberg, the spiritual leader Sadhguru, and the tech philosopher Jaron Lanier. Interrogating our perceptions of public figures, they suggest the ever more blurred line between history and fiction, while proposing a position of optimism in the face of oblivion.