NEW YORK, NY.- For Jim Shaws exhibition at
Metro Pictures the Los Angeles-based artist presents a large mural and 20 drawings comprising a comic book that center on his fictional religion Oism, a narrative Shaw has been developing for more than 20 years. The works draw on eccentric aspects of American history and quirky old imagery to illustrate part two of Shaws proposed, four-part Oist prog rock opera. Its story, told through the comic book, follows two small-time crooks as they break into the Museum of Oist History in Omaha. Seeking refuge from encroaching FBI agents the pair ducks into a 24-hour wig museum where a helpful curator hides them beneath wigs that inexplicably render them invisible and transport them to the ancient homeland of the religions founding deity O.
The mural The Rinse Cycle (2012) is Shaws latest painting on a found canvas theater backdrop. Executed in the tradition of 1970s album art, Shaw says The Rinse Cycle symbolically represents the operas second movement in which a group of oversized beehive hairdos hover around a desert landscape they share with the interior view of a washing machine in mid-cycle. The 20-page comic book Into the Void (2012) illustrates the operas themes and symbols in the style of, as Shaw describes, pre-code 50s crime and horror comics, with a religious didactic aspect thrown into the mix. Audacious 1960s hairstyles, comic books and Christian ephemera all play into the elaborate visualization of Shaws outlandish yet incisive mythology.
The recently published book, My Mirage (2011), includes all the works from Shaws renowned Billy series, which chronicles the transition of a white middle-class American kid named Billy from acid-dropping teen to pagan cult member and finally reborn Christian fundamentalist.
Shaws one-person exhibitions include: Kunstmuseum Luzern, Lucerne, Switzerland (2011); CAPC Musée d'art contemporain, Bordeaux, France (2011); MoMA PS 1, New York (2007); Magasin Center of Contemporary Art, Grenoble, France (2003); Swiss Institute, New York (2002); and Frankfurt Kunstverein (1998). Shaws work has been in group exhibitions at: Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankurt (2011); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2011); Los Angeles County Museum (2010); New Museum, New York (2010); The Museum of Modern Art, New York (2009/10); Centre Pompidou, Paris (2006); and Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2006).