NEW YORK, NY.- Fridman Gallery is presenting Eat a Pink Owl, Tamar Ettuns second solo exhibition with the gallery.
This is the third installment in Ettuns tetralogy, Mauve Bird with Yellow Teeth Red Feathers Green Feet and a Rose Belly, incorporating sculptural installations, performance, video, and works on paper. Ettun's ongoing body of work focuses on primal emotions, each symbolized by a primary color: the 2015 Blue was for Empathy, last years Yellow Desire. In this exhibition, Pink is synonymous with Aggression which is another way to relate (identification can occur literally, through eating the objects of our fancy).
The dualities in Ettuns practice performance/sculpture, healing/trauma, temporariness/ permanence, functionality/abstractness apply to relationships among humans, and humans relationships to objects. Ettun applies dance vocabulary and compositional techniques to object making, and she challenges the stillness of sculpture by making it perform: grab, stretch, hang, balance, reach out. The works in Eat a Pink Owl are dichotomies wound up with potential energy. An upside-down woman at full stretch her feet suspended from the ceiling, hair dangling to the floor, an inverted Caryatid echoing the gallerys columns carries the height of the space and a procreational bird's nest inside her. A seated warrior woman, tightly wrapped in self-defense and propriety, flashes a peacocks tail. A giant pink horse, soft and flexible, his rider a fisherwoman: neither is in charge, both are ready to charge.
Ettuns flamboyant assemblages call for a physical response in the viewer: their sharp-edged limbs and horns point to internalized pain and destructive tendencies; yet their soft bodies and relaxed poses suggest rebirth and pleasure. Pink used to be a boys color, becoming a symbol of submissiveness ascribed to women only after World War II. Eat a Pink Owl is about gender fluidity, femmes repossessing pink as a symbol of assertiveness, through bodily forms and primal emotions.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalog with an essay by Wendy Vogel and an interview with the artist by Barry Schwabsky.
Tamar Ettun (b.1982, Jerusalem) is a Brooklyn-based sculptor and performance artist, and the founder and director of The Moving Company. Ettun received her MFA from Yale University in 2010. Venues of her numerous exhibitions and performances include: Indianapolis Museum of Art, Uppsala Museum of Art, The Watermill Center, Madison Square Park, Bryant Park, The Battery, and Performa. Residencies include Franklin Furnace, Iaspis, The Watermill Center, and the MacDowell Fellowship. Ettun will open a solo exhibition at the Barrick Museum of Art in 2018. http://www.tamarettun.com