Klemens Gasser and Tanja Grunert Present Artist Grayson Cox's First Solo Show with the Gallery
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, April 4, 2026


Klemens Gasser and Tanja Grunert Present Artist Grayson Cox's First Solo Show with the Gallery
Awning, 2011 (sideview). Bleach, fabric, aluminum, rope, 19 x 27 x 72 in. / 48 x 68.5 x 183 cm.



NEW YORK, NY.- Klemens Gasser and Tanja Grunert present Grayson Cox’s first solo show with Gasser Grunert, a collection of prints, places, aspirational architectural, and shunted points of purchase, culled and dyed into fabric with bleach, gives voice to the ominous appeal of corporate identity, of forms so singularly generic that they exemplify the disorientation of contemporary moral space. Nudge, Nudge Me Do points to a mass compliance that has transformed our built environment and our mode of navigation within it. On view is an evocation of soft corporate power without concrete intention.

In the bleached prints, each image is revealed through a process of removal, looking suspiciously as if it had always waited within the fabric, like an image on a shroud. The resulting images have a sense of being embedded, created inside the fabric as opposed to on top of it.

The bleached stains in the fabric pull the archetypal images into a gray area between physical embedded-ness and online incorporeity. Grayson Cox looks deeply at images accrued behind single search words, finding not the desired physical perspective or mode of depiction, but what is for him the archetypal form. In this now common method of image retrieval from the Internet, as images are categorized by a keyword, organized by concept, not physical location, their pools of association expand. This gaining of perspective via sorting of an infinite supply of the same type seeks an archetypal image. Grayson Cox uses this process to create narrative from the non-material archetypal form.

Grayson Cox alters the images mainly in passing them on, revitalizing them via a process of double negation; first by removing them from their original context of use and again in bleaching them into commercially dyed fabrics, leaving behind images in phantom colors indicative of the unseen chemistry of their manufacture. This 360 degree rotational displacement of the images mirrors the empty spaces they advertise. Corporate conference centers, cruise ships and overly prescriptive ergonomic chairs collapse the vagaries of individual orientation into a consummately palatable one-size-fits-all experience buffet. Here comfort and oppression are one in the same aspects of the over-determined space, instructing behavior, impressing postures of comfort, cooperation and control.

In the late 1950’s when more than 250,000 residents of the South Bronx were being displaced by Robert Moses’ automobile-centric reorientation of New York City towards the newly expanding suburbs, smaller, more focused studies on human disorientation were being pursued at the U.S. Naval School of Aviation Medicine in Pensacola, Florida. Not unlike those exposed to Moses’ machinery, both unstoppable and detection-less in its advance, participants in the Pensacola studies found themselves overcome with motion sickness, physically unable to distinguish up from down, left from right. In motion sickness the eyes betray the ears. Rather the labyrinth of the inner ear, our main sensory system for spatial orientation and balance is overridden by the main organ it orients, the eyes. Once a fighter pilot’s malady, acceleration induced hallucinations seem universally relevant today when unrelenting visions of corporatization consistently outpace the constitutive radar of human agency. The Catholic philosopher Charles Taylor argues that contemporary moral space demands gyroscopic tools, which maintain their orientation to a single horizon, lest multiple conflicting horizons enchant us like the fighter pilot who accelerates towards the sea. Taylor’s thesis is simple: disorientation is not the problem of being a self in an undefined space; it is the much more fundamental problem of being an undefined self. Grayson Cox’s work suggests the ever present nudge that masquerades as it manipulates, seeming to bend to your every whim even as you find yourself in increasingly compromised positions.










Today's News

March 28, 2011

Christie's Offers One of the Finest Private Collections of Early 20th Century Decorative Art

Exhibition of Paintings, Drawings, and Prints by James Siena at the Pace Gallery

New York Marks 100th Anniversary of 1911 Capitol Fire with Exhibition and New Film

Film of Werner Herzog's Exclusive Access to the Recently Discovered Chauvet Caves

Author Jeffrey Archer to Auction Works of Art from His Collection at Christie's in June

Sotheby's London Presents Beautiful and Rare Objects from Its April Sale of Arts of the Islamic World

Thomas Dane Gallery in London Presents Artist Anya Gallaccio's Where is Where It's At

Last Keats Love Letter in Private Hands for Sale Tomorrow at Bonhams; Dying Poet Pours Out Heart

Only Publicly Known Matching Pair of Singing Bird Pistols Offered at Christie's

'Stations of a Pause' by Jitish Kallat at Gallery Chemould Prescott Road in Mumbai

Dana Lixenberg Portrays Amsterdam in a Series of Landscapes and Interiors at Foam

SKMU Sorlandets Kunstmuseum Presents Eija-Liisa Ahtila: Where is Where?

Yinka Shonibare Announces Kazuya Tsuji Winner of The Grange Gardens Sculpture Prize

New Permanent Display, from Victorian to Modern British Art, for the Walker Art Gallery

Giant Silk China Scroll Goes for $30 Million Plus to Anonymous Hong Kong Collector

Aerosol Art by Ben Quilty Inhabits the Art Gallery of South Australia in Adelaide

De Hallen Haarlem Presents the First Solo Exhibition by Matt Stokes in a Dutch Museum

Trio of Intriguing & Provocative Exhibitions at Wexner Center in Ohio this Spring

Klemens Gasser and Tanja Grunert Present Artist Grayson Cox's First Solo Show with the Gallery

S.M.A.K. Conceives a Plan to Display the Works of Art and Documents of Marcel Broodthaers

European Drawings from the Collection on View at the Portland Museum of Art

Monika Bartholomé, Arnulf Rainer, and Clemens Weiss Celebrated at Museum Kunst Palast

Homage to Miodrag Djuric Dado Around Three Large Triptychs at Galerie Jeanne-Bucher

Ophelia: An Exhibition of New Paintings by Antonio Murado at Von Lintel Gallery

Zapoteca and Mixteca Art Together for the First Time at the National Museum of Anthropology

Smithsonian American Art Museum Meets the Challenge for New Curator of Craft Position at its Renwick Gallery

Old Clock Gets New Spot at New York's Grand Central

Nicolas Feuillatte Selects Julien Taylor as the "Artist of the Year"




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, .

 



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


sports betting sites not on GamStop

Truck Accident Attorneys



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez


Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       
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