LOS ANGELES, CA.- Praz-Delavallade is presenting departed for the curve, a solo exhibition by Cole Sternberg and his first-ever at the Gallery. Featuring a selection of the artists new and never-before scene painterly works on linen, the exhibition considers the place of humankind against the environments scale and eminence, hinting at the ill fated and selfinflicted demise of our species as the earth takes itself backas seas rise and paradigms shift.
In alluding to oncoming change, the exhibitions title also suggests a rather unexpected willingness to embrace the unknown. Ruminating on its signification, Sternberg asks What is a curve? Is it a turn on a mountain pass that faces vast splendor and yet touches mortality? Is it the subtle curvature of the earth seen on a distant horizon? Is it east of Eden or maybe west? Is it individual or institutional? A peak becoming a valley? Are we destined to slip from the road, determined to face our reveries?
The works on view continue this meditation and draw upon similar scenes, those of mountain ranges and mystical valleys, rocky outcroppings, idyllic pools, flora and fauna, but some of Sternbergs canvases also possess a darker undertone that speaks to the relation between human actions and their impact on the natural environment. Vintage imagery of urban spaces, massive crowds, cars, oil rigs, and advertisements are overlaid with subtle washes of watercolor, blurring and abstracting otherwise recognizable compositions. The resulting effect thus foregrounds scenes of life that only vaguely come into view within Sternbergs foggy, washed out universeas the canvases vacillate between realistic imagery and deconstructed environmentally-affected abstraction.
By embracing the simultaneously destructive and regenerative forces of the Earth as a collaboratorwind, sand, sun, waterSternberg allows his own painterly mark-making and the images presented in his compositions to lose cohesion and deteriorate into semi-obscurity. This process of erasure that can be seen in and flock to the headwaters of the Merced and Tuolumne, 2019 is, for example, aided by the ocean, through which the artist often drags his linen canvases and in which his compositions break apart like light fracturing through water.
In contrast of such natural processes, Sternberg also power-washes some of his canvases, such as they are probably thinking other peoples thoughts, 2022, employing an intentionally aggressive action that serves as a counterpoint to the gentler, natural flow of the ocean. Both processes, however, cause the symbols of humanity that the artist includes in his compositions to disappear and be replaced by the Earths patterning of clouds and light and water and ash.
A triangle cut through one of the gallery walls, which may evoke a sail, leads to an immersive environment in which plays the artists film titled the sea, the swallows, the machine room (2015-2022). As a performancedriven translation of the same themes explored in his canvases, the film possesses a distinctly painterly affect and makes the viewer take note of a certain cinematic quality in his canvases. After processing the rather existential narratives at play in the film, as well as the exhibition, one may be left questioning the status of our human presence in a space as ethereal as a dream. Even though, as Sternberg indicates, we may have departed for the curve, hope persists amongst the wave of oncoming change.
Cole Sternberg is a conceptual artist who lives and works in Los Angeles. His practice contemplates humanitys existential quandary: that of being hopelessly destructive, yet forever and inevitably linked with nature. Through varied mediaincluding painting, sculpture, installation, performance, photography, film and writingSternberg positions the aspirations of humankind against the dominant and regenerative forces of the environment and the arbitration of time. For the artist, the conclusion is unavoidable. human enterprisesart, language, history, law, and governmentare ephemeral and illusory endeavors that attempt to reflect, parallel, and challenge the ascendency of nature, but to no avail. His works are held by major museums and collections, including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA; the Pérez Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL; the El Segundo Museum of Art, El Segundo, CA; the American University Museum, Washington, D.C.; and Deutsche Telekom, Germany.