'Hollow Leg' at Laurel Gitlen displays works that permute production into metaphor and back again

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, May 8, 2024


'Hollow Leg' at Laurel Gitlen displays works that permute production into metaphor and back again
Image courtesy the artist and What Pipeline, Detroit. Photo: Alivia Zivich.



NEW YORK, NY.- The fruits of mass production are always in season. Ripe products constantly drop, bounce around and then settle, packing every available nook and cranny of negative space in the world. When enough solid objects accumulate, they begin to mimic liquid, oozing out of our carts, closets, and feeds to envelope, saturate and reseed themselves in our bodies and minds. Insatiability irrigates the fields, keeps conveyor belts rolling; our collective hollow leg never fills.

Is art, by definition, scarce and difficult to produce? Does it circulate in the same flowing ooze of consumer goods? Artists circumvent societal rationale surrounding labor and value, to more intimately negotiate the value of their products in a speculative and volatile marketplace. But artistic access to broader global consumer markets is limited by the most timeless and transcultural quality in the arts: scale. Not only are the material scales of mass production unobtainable to artists; the very control, agility and holistic messaging required for an individual's work to be realized is not possible by its means. In the artist's case, mass production must be deployed conceptually; global efficacy only comes with alchemical success.

In the simplest and most terrestrial definition, alchemy is the attempt to produce a valuable and rare substance from a common one. Alchemic success would appear something like a “hack;” an unlocking and instantaneous redistribution of hoarded power and wealth; a synthesis of the pursuit of justice, clarity of perception, and gambling. As alchemists operated from proto-laboratories, attempting a material reordering of the personal and social world, so the artist conducts their work in semi-privacy, bolstered by the idea (or promising others) that their product ­— the work — will reach beyond its own, mere edges.

Organized in collaboration with artist Bill Jenkins, Hollow Leg includes works that permute production into metaphor and back again, opening portals for previously unallowed or unattainable agency. Inhabiting the aesthetics of mass production and confounding its conditions of material, design, media, marketing and consumption, artists and artworks are brought together in an exhibition of ongoing alchemic defiance.

Max Guy lives in Chicago. Guy works with paper, video, performance, assemblage and installation. He uses fast, ergonomic ways to make poetry of the world, filtering it though personal effects. The works in Hollow Leg are made from modular halloween decorations that pack flat and compact. Papered with news clippings about black murders at the hands of police, the works are ghost-like and perpetually current. Max Guy had a solo show at the Renaissance Society in 2022, and was included in We Buy Gold: Seven at Jack Shainman in 2023. Guy will have a solo exhibition with Goodweather, Chicago in 2024.

Bill Jenkins explores individual agency within the structure of an urban environment. Often taking up impossible tasks with inadequate means, such as capturing and channeling light with packing and shipping materials. Jenkins' work can embrace failure as a space to imaginatively recuperate questions about functionality that would otherwise be wasteful or disastrous outcomes in architecture, or consumer product development. Jenkins lives in New York and has had recent solo shows at 9 Herkimer Place, Brooklyn; CAPITAL, San Francisco; Galleria Stereo, Warsaw; and Laurel Gitlen, New York.

Kate Newby makes works in ceramic, glass and cast metals that engage directly with the viewer and the environment, often responding to the elements of wind, water and time and questioning where and how sculpture happens. Kate Newby's works can also toe the line of invisibility, with interventions that risk disappearing into the architecture. In Hollow Leg, Newby replaces the doorknob to the gallery with an earthy, funky ceramic sculpture, an unexpected pleasure for the hand and eye. Recent solo exhibitions include Fine Arts, Sydney, Sydney; Marfa Book Company, Marfa; Michael Lett, Auckland; Sunday Painter, London; and Laurel Gitlen, New York. Recent institutional shows include The Blaffer Museum, Houston; and Palais de Tokyo, Paris. Newby was born in Aotearoa, New Zealand and lives and works in Floresville, Texas.

Chadwick Rantanen lives and works in Los Angeles. Rantanen is an aftermarket modifier, adding additional functions to home goods, and then adding modifications to those functions. Redundancies are typically about due diligence, insurance and safety, but Rantanen adds redundancies until order and utility collapses in his hermetic and circular forms. Recent solo exhibitions include Michael Benevento, Los Angeles; Secession, Vienna; Museo Pietro Canonica, Rome; Standard (Oslo), Oslo; and Maxwell Graham/Essex Street, New York.

Emily Mae Smith lives and works in New York. Her sly and subversive paintings use a vocabulary of signs and symbols that reference gender, class, and violence often humorously skewering art history's misogynstic myths. Smith's painting Blue Jean references a 19th century wallpaper design of rats and wheat, which the artist has linked to a preoccupation with cycles of feast and famine, desire and disgust. Emily Mae Smith had a breakout exhibition at Laurel Gitlen, New York in 2015, and has since had solo exhibitions with Contemporary Fine Arts, Berlin; Galerie Perrotin, Paris; Petzel, New York, and Rodolphe Janssens, Brussels, among others. Solo Museum exhibitions include Pond Society, Shanghai; SCAD Museum of Art, Savannah; Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford; and Le Consortium Museum, Dijon.

Matthew Watson lives and works in New York. Watson produces portraits of human, animal, and material subjects, realized through the optimizing potential of several mediums. Watson relies on the most up to the moment technical aptitudes of the photographic medium, and the depth of conservation research about western styles of oil painting to fabricate images. Optics and digital tools fully replace observational drawing, but then Watson shifts to making images by hand in oil paint following procedures that guarantee his prints will outlast any other current photographic medium and have more saturation and complexity of color than is possible with photographic printing. Solo exhibitions include Federico Vavassori, Milan; and Joe Sheftel, New York.

Stefanie Victor lives and works in New York. Victor makes sculptures that relate to the body and its movements, as well as interior infrastructure and hardware. Made from a range of raw materials including cement, glass, metal, and clay, their forms often belie their materiality. Rather than hard and still, they conjure the possibility of pliancy or activation. Recurring, shifting, and singular elements suggest and disrupt pattern, referencing the repetition of commonplace elements such as hinges, decorative moulding, and electrical cords. But the sculptures' abstract qualities, unusual relationships to the wall, unexpected details, slight variations, and imperfections borne from hand-made processes shift the work away from the mechanized and familiar and towards more particular, human kinds of forms. Recent solo exhibitions include Laurel Gitlen, New York; and Adams and Ollman, Portland. Victor has also been included in exhibitions at MoMA PS1, Participant, Inc., and The Drawing Center, New York.

Bruno Zhu lives and works between Portugal and The Netherlands. Zhu's work is Influenced by fashion, design, publishing and scenography, engaging the audience in questioning and rewriting collective narratives. Operating in the space of fiction, Zhu effectively subverts agency and authorship while simultaneously manipulating time and value. Negotiating nostalgia, ornamentation and abstraction, Zhu's works interrogate efficiency and associative thinking via redundancy and humor.Recent exhibitions include What Pipeline, Detroit; Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin; and Centre d'Art Contemporain Genève, Geneva. Zhu will have solo exhibitions at Veronica, Seattle; and Chisenhale Gallery, London in 2024.

Laurel Gitlen
Hollow Leg: Max Guy, Bill Jenkins, Kate Newby, Chadwick Rantanen, Emily Mae Smith, Stefanie Victor, Matthew Watson, Bruno Zhu
November 16th, 2023 - December 15th, 2023
Opening Reception Thursday, November 16, 6-8 PM

Full Image Caption: Bruno Zhu, Divorced, father of two. We met twice. He confessed he was not in love with the man he was seeing. Their sex was good, but I made him do things he wouldn't do like to kiss on a first date. He would send me pictures of the sunset after work. They were beautiful to him, and that was beautiful to me. We said goodbye on the phone, one kiss after the other., c. 2022-2023 Cardboard, adhesive vinyl, 70.5 x 60.2 x 12.7 cm (27.75 x 23.75 x 5 in.)










Today's News

November 16, 2023

Lark Mason Associates features "The Collection of Anne Eisenhower"

What is the Inverted Jenny, and why is it worth $2 million?

Rarely seen Hilma af Klint and special Matisse series opening at Glenstone

The Morgan Library & Museum presents 'Medieval Money, Merchants, and Morality'

Italian artist Emilio Vedova presents first solo exhibition in Korea

'Yoshitomo Nara: The Bootleg Drawings 1988 - 2023' artist's first ever solo show in Geneva

Gazing into the past and future at historic observatories

Roberts Projects announces representation of Suchitra Mattai

Vince Clarke, a synth-pop mastermind, on his unexpected solo album

'Springing to Life: Drawings by Leon Kossoff' now opening at Annely Juda Fine Art

Morgan Lehman opens an exhibition of new works by Kim McCarty

Eric N. Mack conducting first one-person exhibition at Paula Cooper Gallery

Lyndsey Ingram opens Kate Friend's second solo show at the gallery

Contemporary Week at Dorotheum: Modern and contemporary art, jewels and watches sales from 28 November to 1 December

Fred Wilson: Dramatis Personae presented by Pace Gallery

New-York Historical Society announces details of its new Democracy Wing as construction begins

Winston Wächter Fine Art, New York exhibits a collection of photographs by Paulette Tavormina

Israel-Hamas War sows disruption at the National Book Awards

An opera's riverboat journey brings the rainforest onboard

Joe Harjo's main space exhibition investigates language as a tool for oppression

'Danny and the Deep Blue Sea' review: Aubrey Plaza steps into the ring

Molly Crabapple's most personal project 'The Chair Series' now on view at Postmasters 5.0

Works from the Saloni Doshi Collection 'The Right To Look' now on view at Space118

'Hollow Leg' at Laurel Gitlen displays works that permute production into metaphor and back again

Winning Betting Strategies for Dragon Tiger Online Betting

Katana Sword in the US │ A Blend of History and Modern Fascination

Tips on How to Login and Download E-Book in Z Library

ZMO's AI Marvels: Revolutionizing Visual Creation with Background Changing and Anime Art Generation

Exploring the Future of Home Decor: The Rise of Furniture Rental Services




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

sa gaming free credit
Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful