LOS ANGELES, CA.- Parrasch Heijnen is currently presenting A Particular Kind of Heaven, a group show curated by artist Ali Dipp which began on May 6th, and will continue through June 3rd, 2023. The title of this show references Ed Ruscha's 1983 painting of the same name to suggest a central animating impulse in the nation's history: the landscape, when looked at from afar, stirsand at times instantiatesAmerican aspiration. Affixed at a vantage point where it can be perceived, horizons often dictate the country's expanse, a people's dream, and possibility's extent. This group show at parrasch heijnen heralds a reevaluation of the landscape's cultural import by entangling the concept with a rich array of inter-generational voices. Furthermore, by conveying how artists have and continue to view the landscape, this show reckons with the environment as a subject capable of providing unforeseeable visions.
Featured in this show, Mike Kelleys American Landscape I, 1980, explores the genres quotidian sensibilities. Kelleys acrylic painting of the moon splashing light across a cavernous valley, although inherently humble in composure, upwells profound historic stakes. Victoria Sambunaris 2020 photograph of trains paralleling flat earth, traces a critical throughline from the nineteenth-centurys railroad boom through NAFTAs influence on infrastructure. Akin to Ken Prices 1989 line drawing of a highway tracing the tops of rolling hills, both works suggest how the dictates of commerce permanently impress a changing earth. Christine Howard Sandovals International Standardization Organization, 2014-16, embosses a scenic image with the structure that seeks to measure vastness. Likewise, Gina Gwen Palacios 2023 painting on cardboard, which embosses a chain link fences lattice work upon a horizon, invokes a response to critic Dave Hickeys notion that beauty is and always will be blue skies and open highway. Beauty, within the contexts of forecasting visions, is ever elusivea mirage on the cement, perhaps ethereal as the crystalline bottle in William Egglestons photograph, Untitled (Bottle on Cement Porch), 1965-74.
A Particular Kind of Heaven champions the myriad perspectives required to reckon with the futures pervasive possibilities. Ultimately, in offering the subject a second look, the exhibition ushers the prospects of new, even bold, advents.
A Particular Kind of Heaven includes work by: Peter Alexander, Carlos Almaraz, Anne Appleby, Jennifer Bartlett, Forrest Bess, Katherine Bradford, Ali Dipp, William Eggleston, EJ Hauser, Olivia Hill, Christine Howard Sandoval, Mike Kelley, Maya Lin, John McAllister, Laurie Nye, Gina Gwen Palacios, Sylvia Plimack Mangold, Ken Price, Eleanor Ray, Ed Ruscha, Victoria Sambunaris, Stephen Shore, Ellen Siebers, Maya Stovall, riel Sturchio, and H.C. Westermann. Ali Dipp
"Let us be lovers, we'll marry our fortunes together"
"I've got some real estate here in my bag"
So we bought a pack of cigarettes and Mrs. Wagner pies
And walked off to look for America
Simon and Garfunkel, America, 1968
A closing reception will be hosted at 2p on Saturday, June 3, which includes a conversation between art historian Alexander Nemerov, the Carl and Marilynn Thoma Provostial Professor in the Arts and Humanities at Stanford University, and curator Ali Dipp. Nemerov is the recipient of numerous academic awards. His book, Helen Frankenthaler and 1950s New York (2021), was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in Biography. His most recent book The Forest: A Fable of America in the 1830s was published in March of this year.
Ali Dipp (b. 1997, El Paso, TX) graduated from the Brown-RISD Dual Degree Program in May 2022 with dual degrees from Brown University (A.B., English) and Rhode Island School of Design (B.F.A., Painting). Dipp is now pursuing an interdisciplinary Ph.D. in Modern Thought and Literature at Stanford University. She received the Royal Drawing Academy's Dumfries Residency in Scotland. Dipp has staged her original plays through the company she co-founded in 2012, Sunhouse Arts. Sunhouse Arts donates all net profits to humanitarian efforts in the El Paso-Juárez area. During the spring and summer of 2021, Dipp co-hosted and created an iHeartRadio show broadcasted across the Southwest and Mexico, the Pass of the North Radio Show. Dipp recently completed the first manuscript she aims to publish, Book of Yet. She is represented by Franklin Parrasch Gallery, New York.