François Ghebaly opening the exhibition 'The Agreement, The Fool, and The Storm' by Ivy Haldeman
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, December 4, 2024


François Ghebaly opening the exhibition 'The Agreement, The Fool, and The Storm' by Ivy Haldeman
Ivy Haldeman, Bikinis, Beyond Edge, Straight Ahead, Tilt Back (Don), 2023. Acrylic on canvas, 105 x 94 inches (266.5 x 239 cm.)



LOS ANGELES, CA.- François Ghebaly is now opening The Agreement, The Fool, and The Storm at the gallery’s Downtown Los Angeles location, the newest exhibition by the American visual artist Ivy Haldeman.

Bikini Atoll is a coral reef made up of a ring of islands that sits some 2600 miles southwest of Honolulu and 5000 miles from Los Angeles. In 1946, after decades of German and Japanese imperial control, the United States displaced the atoll’s Marshallese population and began to use the islands as a peacetime nuclear testing site. Over the next twelve years, the U.S. military deployed nearly two dozen atomic bombs on land, over the ocean, and in the coral reefs of Bikini.

To keep up with the Soviet nuclear program, the United States set off bigger and bigger explosions in the Pacific. Just as the testing was beginning, a Cold War-era race of reverse scale was launched 8000 miles away when French designer Louis Réard co-opted the atoll’s name to describe yet another mid-century provocation of superlative proportions, one that would come to define gendered aesthetics for decades to come: “the Bikini––smaller than the smallest swimsuit in the world.” In red, pink, and polkadot styles, Réard’s design is a central figure in Haldeman’s newest exhibition, The Agreement, The Fool, and The Storm.

For Haldeman, whose unmistakable visual imaginary spans from titanic hot dog androgynes to cooly gesticulating power suits that evoke 1980’s corporate feminism, the sordid genealogies of the ‘bikini’ are hardly out of bounds. On the contrary, they’re prime targets for Haldeman’s critical acumen and unique sense of empathy. Haldeman’s paintings overlap American visual iconography, history, and underlying commodity fetish with her characteristic gestural styling. Her work seeks to cast a light on—and in many cases dislodge—latent hegemonies.

Notions of ‘slippage’ are at the heart of Haldeman’s art and the exhibition is a study in the push-pull between image and power. Conveyed in the interplay between consumer culture and the surprising interiorities she’s able to carve out in her portrayals, her ‘slips’ become sites of newfound potential. “There’s something about shaking images loose from our expectations,” the artist noted. “We can put emphasis on how we arrived at those expectations in the first place, and on where we might still find some agency.”

Alongside her signature hot dog and powersuit forms, Haldeman presents three new bodies of work. The first, a collection of massive, mural-esque canvases and small-scale watercolor studies of polychrome bikinis, are titled after tropical storms in the Gulf of Mexico. A far cry from the scantily-clad beach bodies of popular imagination, Haldeman depicts her bikinis in flight with reams of loose leaf paper in enormous gyres. They sail across her sprawling pale blue surfaces as though propelled by violent climate change-induced tempests, or nuclear gales; “I think of the form of the mushroom cloud, up and then out.” In the absence of clear figural centerpoints, the works convey a kind of scalar quality that can be extrapolated far beyond the confines of the canvas. The tumbling sheets of paper recall the 1990s Desert Storm ticker-tape parades captured in Jem Cohen’s Little Flags, an uncanny foreshadowing of the maelstrom in Manhattan skies after 9/11.

In two other series, Hand Hold and Cuffs, Haldeman returns to a more intimate scale and focuses on reciprocal figures and exchanges of power. Hand Hold imagines interactions between a hand and a flamboyant yellow banana. In each work, the hand acts both as a tacit support for the banana figure and also as a constraining or impeding force. The banana, caught in a breeze not unlike the one that blows against Haldeman’s bikinis, serves as a choreographic repository of histrionics and otherwise gendered displays of affectation––a pacified proxy for “unacceptable public emotions.”

In Cuffs, Haldeman turns her attention to the gesture of the ‘handshake’ as a symbol of political theater and collective stakes. “I think of the feeling, the anxiety, as a layperson, of watching political transactions from afar—decisions being made that you have absolutely no say in, and that will also irreversibly change your life and everyone else’s lives. You’re excluded, and you’re also complicit.” For Haldeman, the handshake and other coincidences of intimacy and hegemony become recurring metonyms for the sociopolitical condition of individual responsibility, a condition that is fastidiously baked into our fundamental modes of visual literacy, and against which we might yet hope to forge new channels of solidarity and identification.

Ivy Haldeman

From titanic anthropomorphized hot dogs, to phantom skirt-suits and strolling fingers, Ivy Haldeman (b. 1985, Aurora, CO) has spent over a decade cultivating a practice in painting and multimedia sculpture that flexes the psychic power of slippage and transfiguration. Blending elements of psychoanalysis, character study, and visual sociology, Haldeman creates work interested in the mechanisms of commodity fetishism and the interior subjective. Across her work, colossal figures, depicted in clean lines and graphic styling, are cast against the brilliance of titanium dioxide. Their range of physical and emotive states—sensual relaxation, withdrawn repose, casual ennui, electric self-assertion—exemplify Haldeman’s fluency in gestural language, and enrich her figures’ concurrent investments in labor and capital. Interweaving consumerist tropes, ironic conceit, and sensitive, humanist rendering, Haldeman’s practice probes the depths of our capacities of self-recognition.

Haldeman currently works and resides in New York City. She received a BFA from Cooper Union in 2008, and her recent solo exhibitions include Tara Downs (2023, 2021, 2018); the Yuz Museum (2022); François Ghebaly (2020); and Capsule Shanghai (2019). Her work has been exhibited in numerous group exhibitions, including at Petzel Gallery, Hauser & Wirth, Fredericks & Freiser, the Frans Hal Museum, and Paul Kasmin Gallery, among others. She's been featured in publications including the New York Times, Cultured Magazine, W Magazine, Brooklyn Rail, the New Yorker, and Artforum.

François Ghebaly
Ivy Haldeman: The Agreement, The Fool, The Storm
January 13th, 2024 – February 10th, 2024










Today's News

January 13, 2024

Indiana University cancels major exhibition of Palestinian artist

Jessie Homer French paints infernos but she sees rainbows

Seeing Isamu Noguchi through someone else's eyes

With the fall of a city, modernity kicks in

Larry Collins, rockabilly guitar prodigy, is dead at 79

'Everything has a Time': Cleveland's longest-serving conductor plans his departure

Russian Oligarch who says he was cheated testifies at art fraud trial

Sean McFarland opens 'Alluvial Fan, Strange Attractor' January 13 at Casemore Gallery

François Ghebaly opening the exhibition 'The Agreement, The Fool, and The Storm' by Ivy Haldeman

Asheville Art Museum expands collection with twelve new acquisitions

Polaroids new instant film with Pantone's Color of the Year 2024 highlights power of human connection

In Abigail Lane's exhibition 'Doing Time' birds have no eyes or legs

David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles and Pace Gallery, New York present 'Sam Gilliam: The Last Five Years'

Clown cardio doesn't take exercise seriously

Tina Fey on 'Mean Girls' then and now

The EGOT winner behind Sondheim's signature sound

Alice Mason, real estate fixer and hostess to the elite, dies at 100

Estates of Marjorie and Robert L. Hirschhorn and Stanley Weiss to be featured in Nye & Company auction

Then and now: Revisiting the Sopranos' New Jersey 25 years later

Honor Fraser is opening group exhibition 'SMALL VO1CE' curated by Jesse Damiani today

'Hana Yilma Godine: A Brush in the Universe' now on view at Fridman and Rachel Uffner Galleries

Powerful solo show by Julie Brook 'What is it that will last?' to coincide with 2024 Scotland Unwrapped

Is what's good for Taylor Tomlinson's career bad for her life?

Serbian Association for Asset Protection

Immerse Yourself: Step Into a New Reality with Virtual Reality Adventures at Le Mans Entertainment

Beyond Access: The Impact of Custom Wristbands on Event Engagemen

How to Hide Glare Spots in Your Scrapbooking Designs

Top 5 best Katanas to Have

Zerogpt.net: The Ultimate AI Content Detector

Instagram Unleashed: Turbocharge Your Presence with IG Followers and IGFollowers Mastery

Zefoy: Navigating the Creative Cosmos and Unlocking TikTok Symbiosis

Elevating Your Digital Presence: A Strategic Approach to Boosting YouTube Views and TikTok Followers




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
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Houston Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer

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