NEW YORK, NY.- Benrubi Gallery is presenting Athenree, the gallerys first solo exhibition by Brooklyn-based artist, Jude Broughan. Athenree is a tiny beach town in the coastal Bay of Plenty, in the artists native New Zealand. It was named after the Northern Irish townland that is home to the monolithic Athenree Portal Tomb. Revealing an interest in the process of traveling and the concomitant instability of place, Broughans new works state their claim on the here and now while simultaneously questioning exactly where and when this might be.
In assemblages, loose-hanging works, mixed-media panels, and photo collages, Broughan draws on the languages of painting and printmaking alongside those of photography and collage to play with space and form, line and color. Using colored vinyl, leather, denim, and polyester grounds, she alludes to her own physicality while pondering the nature of artistic production itself.
Broughan manipulates her photographs visually and physically, subtly shifting the emphasis of personal and quotidian imagery in some works, referencing the language of commercial imagery in others. Her use of stitchinga strategy informed by Warhols Sewn Photographsinserts shots distinguished by their immediacy into carefully composed arrangements, the thread dividing our attention between the physicality of the art object and the patterning of its surface. By also cutting holes or apertures in her works supports, Broughan refers to the mechanics (and limitations) of photography, digital manipulation, and vision itself, and alludes to our seemingly innate tendency to edit. As New Zealand artist and critic Peter Dornauf writes, this exposes the constructed nature of the subject while also providing a simulation of depth, which seems like the contradiction it actually is. Such incongruity and paradox is the essence of this artists practice.
Jude Broughan is a New Zealand-born artist living in Brooklyn, New York. Recent solo and group exhibitions include Best of 2012, Soloway, Brooklyn, and Written By Snakes, Churner and Churner, New York (both 2012); New. New York, Essl Museum, Vienna (201213); Plot, Dimensions Variable, Miami, and Certain Lights Churner and Churner, New York (both 2014); A Weekend in the Country Magnan Metz Gallery, New York, and Honey, Calder & Lawson Gallery, Hamilton, New Zealand (both 2015); and Ornamentation of the Joint, Old Pfizer Building, Brooklyn (2016). Broughan is a 2015 Pollock-Krasner Foundation grantee and a graduate of the School of Visual Arts and Hunter College.