American designer Misha Kahn exhibits free form installation in Friedman Benda's project space
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American designer Misha Kahn exhibits free form installation in Friedman Benda's project space
Installation view. Photography by Andrew Meredith.



NEW YORK, NY.- Astrology tells us that about every 27 years, Saturn returns to the same place in the sky that it occupied at the moment of a person’s birth, and that this is a good time to review one’s life. Kahn, now approaching 27 years old, takes stock of his life up until this point.

Friedman Benda invites you to Return of Saturn: Coming of Age in the 21st Century, American designer Misha Kahn’s free form installation in the gallery’s project space.

“As I sort through my nearly 27 years, I realize I have been wildly inspired by objects I wasn’t sure if I loved or hated,” says Misha Kahn. Return of Saturn is about the objects people keep in their dark, lonely emotional basements. It’s about stored memories. It is about loving something lightly, without being able to explain why. It’s a survey of the apathetic nostalgia of a millennial reviewing a life defined by the acquisition of items—things left on the sidewalk after college graduation would be gobbled up by hoarders in minivans, or lost in the abyss of thrift store donation bins and only vaguely remembered years later. These possessions are what inspire Kahn; they are shadowed in his new work, and emerge reborn in this installation of mostly indeterminate categorization.

The exhibition contains work in wood, resin, vinyl, spun copper, basketry, glass, cement, aluminum and bronze, as well as pre-peeled wallpaper and a twenty-foot wide woven mohair tapestry. The installation marries earth with space, craft with technology, and the phenomenal with the pedestrian.

The centerpiece of the exhibition is a 12-foot wide hand-woven mohair tapestry depicting a landscape inspired by Jell-O-molds. Humorous and surreal, the tapestry incorporates all manner of found materials, and the composition is reminiscent of medieval tapestries, great battle scene paintings, and riverscapes. Other pieces on view include tables made from wood, rock, and scrap, a China-cabinet made of woven basketry, and a UFO-chandelier of spun copper.

Kahn describes his show as a “survey of uncertainty and possibility.” Unlike the experience exhibition-goers have when viewing objects isolated in a white box, Kahn wants visitors to experience what they might feel if seated in a basement easy chair surrounded by life-long remnants of things of great importance and no importance at all. Kahn says his objects are “meant to encourage comfort with one’s own mental chaos.”










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