NEW YORK, NY.- Asya Geisberg Gallery is presenting Afterwork, the second exhibition at the gallery by Los Angeles-based Rodrigo Valenzuela (September 10 - October 22, 2022). Recently the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a research fellowship at the Smithsonian Museum, Valenzuela has completed a photographic series based on the ghostly absence of workers in an indeterminate time and place, at once futuristic and harking back to a century ago. In staged sets suggesting abandoned factories, Valenzuela wishfully foments a revolution, enabling workers powerless in the face of relentless international movement of capital to flee or perhaps overrun their workplaces. As in a science-fiction universe where we feel a potential reality just out of reach of our present, Valenzuelas scenes meld mechanical objects with steam or smoke, suggestive of steel manufacturing, a cloud of sweat - the only bodily proof of human toil - or a cinematic trope of futuristic atmosphere. In these eerily depopulated scenes, viewers are prompted to envision alternative possibilities to histories of workers dispossessed, or made obsolete, and industries that thrived on human pain.
Rather than take the approach of photographic ruin-porn, where relics of an industrial golden age are depicted as elegantly shambolic, Valenzuela instead chooses to construct fictional environments, in order to imbue his images with the ferocity of his imagination, and crucially, his own physical efforts. Not satisfied with the existing romanticism of blight and resurrection, Valenzuela opts for image making that is defiantly labor intensive and ambitious in scope. Detritus and industrial parts are scavenged over time, taken apart or reassembled, and transformed in the artist's own studio backdrops, then turned into flat images that confuse the viewer with scale shifts and multiple references. The artist calls forth his own identity as a worker, whether his experience working in construction or his process of art-making, often resulting in equally laborious installations in his exhibitions.
Valenzuelas oeuvre has always circled around concepts of labor, and now finds itself eerily prescient to the current moment of workers resigning en masse, avoiding the office, or otherwise fighting to reimagine their identities apart from their employers demands. Emanating from histories of industrial revolutions compelled by squeezing human labor into an engine for capital, the artists work is both a paean to the working class and a requiem for its eventual demise. Even now, workers whose only sweat is in front of computers, worry about their necessity, conspiring to prove their productivity especially if in the solitary confinement of work from home. Valenzuelas images suggest danger, beauty, silence, useless activity, physical struggle, or a world where machines have taken over, no longer requiring anything a human may provide. His identification with the dilemma of the contemporary worker, unable to unionize or find a permanent or well-paying job, begins with blue-collar labor but extends to our present-day white collar blues. While praising our pandemics essential workers, we asked them to work non-stop, endangered and fearful, and have now promptly moved on, again blind to their existence. Valenzuelas images touch on concerns of past, present, and the imaginary future, lingering in enigmatic scenes of desolation and allurement.
Afterwork at Asya Geisberg Gallery will complement Valenzuelas concurrent exhibition "New Works for a Post Workers World", on view at BRIC in Brooklyn, NY, from September 22 to December 23, 2022, with an opening reception on Wednesday, September 21, from 7:00 - 9:00 pm.
Rodrigo Valenzuela was born in Santiago, Chile; and is based in Los Angeles, CA. Valenzuela has presented solo exhibitions at the New Museum, NY; Light Work, Syracuse, NY; University of South Florida,Tampa; Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History, CA; Orange County Museum of Art, Santa Ana, CA; Museum of Art and History, Lancaster, CA; Luis de Jesus, Los Angeles, CA; Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Eugene, OR; and the Portland Art Museum and UPFOR, both Portland, OR. Group exhibitions include The Kitchen, The Drawing Center, Wave Hill, and CUE Art Foundation, all NY; Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami, FL; Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Omaha, NE; Frye Art Museum, Seattle, WA; and The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX, among others. He has also exhibited his work in solo shows internationally at Arróniz Arte Contemporáneo, Mexico City; Peana Projects, Monterrey, NL, Mexico; Galería Patricia Ready and Museo de Arte Contemporàneo, Universidad de Chile, Santiago, Chile; and Galerie Lisa Kandlhofer, Vienna, Austria. Valenzuela has participated in residencies at Dora Maar, Fountainhead, Light Work, MacDowell, Glassell School of Art, Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Kala Art Institute, Vermont Studio Center, Center for Photography at Woodstock, and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. He is the recipient of the 2021 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship in Photography, the Smithsonian Artist Research Fellowship, and the Joan Mitchell Fellowship. His work is included in numerous public and private collections, including those of the Whitney Museum of American Art, J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Frye Art Museum, Tacoma Art Museum, and The Center for Photography at Woodstock. He is an Associate Professor and Head of the Photography Department at UCLA. Valenzuela received his BFA in Art History and Photography from the University of Chile, his BA in Philosophy from Evergreen State College, and his MFA in Photo/Media from the University of Washington.