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Opening Next Thursday: Joan Mitchell at Cheim & Reid

By admin | Published: October 28, 2011

JOAN MITCHELL

The Last Paintings

Reception Thursday November 3 from 6 to 8 pm

Exhibition continues through January 4, 2012

Cheim & Read is pleased to announce an exhibition of late paintings by Joan Mitchell. The show brings together 13 works, dating from 1985-1992, that represent Mitchell’s exploration of painting in the last decade of her life. The exhibition is accompanied by a full-color catalogue with a text by Richard D. Marshall.

Joan Mitchell (1925-1992) moved from Chicago to New York in 1947. Early in her career, she was included in the historically significant 1951 Ninth Street Exhibition. Organized by Leo Castelli, the show was renowned for its championship of Abstract Expressionism, and positioned Mitchell with older, mostly male painters: Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock and Franz Kline among them. Mitchell met de Kooning early on-inspired by his painting, she sought out an introduction-and was a rare female participant in artistic debates at the notorious Cedar Tavern. In 1952, she had her first solo exhibition at the New Gallery.

In 1959, Mitchell moved to Paris, France. She relocated to Vétheuil (outside of Paris) in 1967, and it was there that she spent the last few decades of her life. The French countryside was a strong influence on her work. Mitchell translated its natural beauty into radiating lines and abstract knots of color-her compositions reference water, trees, and floral motifs, and channel the area’s unique quality of light and atmosphere. Mitchell’s late paintings are especially emblematic of her relationship to her environment-her physical surroundings were linked to an emotional landscape, as if her observations of nature were filtered through an internal sieve. As she said, “My paintings [are]…about a feeling that comes to me from the outside, from landscape…My paintings have to do with feelings.”

Though Mitchell abstracted nature, gleaning only its essence, her advocacy for the natural world as a subject finds precedence in the plein air and Impressionist painters a century before. As Marshall elucidates in his essay, Mitchell admired Cézanne, Monet and Van Gogh; their interpretations of the same landscape originated from similarly sensitive perceptions of their surroundings. Non-traditional palettes, and, especially in Monet’s case, a decisive deconstruction of the image, brought attention to brushstrokes and paint itself, a concern that was to be paramount for Mitchell and her contemporaries. Van Gogh’s sunflowers were also an inspiration. The motif (represented by two paintings in this show) is linked not only to Van Gogh, but also to an allegory of mortality. As in Sunflowers, 1990-91, she chose to paint the flowers in a state of decay, reinforcing her desire for the work to “convey the feeling of a dying sunflower.

The last years of Mitchell’s life were marked by the deaths of friends and family. Her own health struggles began in the early 80s with the appearance of cancer. Painting became a refuge and an ally. While the late work still evinces a distinct confidence of gesture and mark-making, it is further characterized by an increased sense of freedom. In his essay, Marshall notes a loss of “restraint,” an “abandon,” a “paring down.” Often presented in diptych format, Mitchell’s expansive late canvases remain evocative of the landscape, but also provide room to explore a more liberated mark. Brushstrokes are energetic and colors vivid. Punctuated by airy, unpainted areas of canvas, the paintings express a sensation of urgency and immediacy, as if in rejection, denial and resistence to her failing health. Through her late work, she strived for immortality, for a merging with the timelessness and formlessness of nature: “I become the sunflower, the lake, the tree. I no longer exist.”

Milton Resnick: The Elephant in the Room remains on view through October 29.

For more information please contact the gallery at 212-242-7727 or gallery@cheimread.com.

Cheim & Read  547 West 25 Street

Posted in Art, Parties | Tagged Art, Cheim and Reid, Joan Mitchell, Jordan Robin, Milton Resnick, Openings, Van Gogh | Leave a comment

Dashwood Tonight!

By admin | Published: October 27, 2011

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Opening Sunday: Medium Deep

By admin | Published: October 26, 2011

In case we haven’t packed your calendar with enough spots to hit this weekend, here’s another art opening Wildcat is getting reved up for.  This Sunday will mark the commencement of Medium Deep, a new exhibition by Corin Hewitt at Laurel Gitlen Gallery. See you here, there and everywhere!

CORIN HEWITT

Medium/Deep

October 30–December 22, 2011

Opening reception Sunday, October 30, 6–8pm

Five staggered cast-dirt walls articulate the stage in Corin Hewitt’s exhibition,Medium/Deep. Behind each, a surrogate figure — off-stage actors composed of concrete, steel, wood, aluminum, simulated pegboard, aprons, makeup, scents and pigments — anticipates an entrance, or its discovery. This minimal scenery, the ground literally up-ended, reveals itself as part of an anxious proscenium: the liminal space of wings, off-stage areas, and what is referred to as crossovers. In a 1927 lecture-demonstration at the Bauhaus, Oskar Schlemmer considered the importance of the theater stage as an “orchestral organism” itself, a space where the metaphysical needs of man are met through illusions that create a transcendent reality. Here, the gallery becomes the backstage of a stalled metaphysical play and its dramatic subjects: the studio space, the artistic performance, and material itself.

Merging anthropomorphic postures with natural and artificial architectural materials, Hewitt’s works presuppose that self-performance is not limited to the living, and that the fixity of objects is also suspect.  Following a series of recent performance-exhibitions, including Seed Stage at the Whitney Museum, Hewitt’s installation dismantles the framing devices that have thus far characterized his durational performances.  Absent from the stage himself, the artist’s body is replaced by chimerical offspring, both sinister and playful conflations of raw material and dramatic pose — sculptural materials playing themselves.

The gridded, cast-earth screens are curious, fertile geometric blinds that not only conceal and bury, but also suggest growth and potential. Perfectly formed into uniform blocks for construction, Hewitt’s dirt tiles function as temporal and material units of measure while still redolent of mortality. Soil, an aggregate field, is both origin and end, constantly in decay yet giving way to life.  These tiles, however, function only as façade, revealing their unfinished plywood backs. Similarly, the dramatic space of the theater and our collective suspension of disbelief locate perception, simulation and projection at the center of the work, simultaneously rejecting the idea of origin or the possibility of any space as real.

One catches the I-beam in the midst of putting on its make-up, the gallery’s column perfumed with the scent of its past, and the two-by-four caught in an awkward contraposto pose. The viewer becomes implicit in the stage as laboratory, and the unsettling consequences of the theater suspended in the wrong, unfinished moment.

Corin Hewitt lives and works in Richmond, VA and Vermont. Hewitt has exhibited widely, including solo exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Seattle Art Museum, and the Atlanta Contemporary Art Center. His work has recently been included in group exhibitions at P.S.1, New York; the Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo; the Henry Art Gallery, Seattle; and Galerie Perrotin, Paris. In the past year, Hewitt was the recipient of the Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in Fine Arts and The Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant for Painting and Sculpture. This is his first solo exhibition at the gallery.

Posted in Art, Culture, Parties | Tagged Art, Corin Hewitt, Jordan Robin, Laurel Gitlen Gallery, Medium Deep | Leave a comment

Psyched on Psychic Ills

By admin | Published: October 26, 2011

Last week marked the 2011 installment of the music conference CMJ. While the conference does not claim to be a festival it is shaped by dozens of music showcases by labels across the city. When I am not lending a hand on set or online at Wildcat, I am working with my boyfriend, Alexander Iezzi on our studio – WDRKMR. In light of CMJ and the recent release of their new record – Hazed Dream, we were commissioned by Life or Death PR to photograph one of our favorite bands – Psychic Ills.  Inspired by the fuzzy daze of their music and the lazy post-CMJ Sunday energy, Alex and I darkened the windows of a Williamsburg loft to project seventies video art works by the likes of Kiki Smith and Lillian Schwartz onto a white wall, creating a psychedelic set for the four-piece. Have a sneak peak!

- Jordan Robin

Posted in Music, Photography | Tagged Alexander Iezzi, CMJ, Elizabeth Hart, Hazed Dream, Jordan Robin, Life or Death PR, Psychic Ills, Sacred Bones, Tres Warren, WDRKMR | Leave a comment

More Art Sunday

By admin | Published: October 26, 2011

In follow up from our last note: there is even MORE ART showing on the Lower East Side this Sunday. Artist Jason Loebs has a new show opening up at 47 Essex Street.

“How do you recognize a ghost? By the fact that it does not recognize itself in a mirror… These ghosts that are commodities transform human producers into ghosts.” [2]

“I remember a disturbed friend, obsessed with self-loathing, telling me he thought the electric shaver was man’s greatest invention: it had saved him, he said, from the necessity of looking into a mirror for the past eleven years.” [3]

Essex Street is pleased to announce A Cigarette End, Jason Loebsʼ first solo exhibition at the gallery. This exhibition extends Loebs’ ongoing interest in the politics of the image, the disruption of the mediums employed for artistic production and the legality of the artist.

Loebs writes of this work: The group of sculptures individually titled Autophantography (1–6) came about by looking at the crude shipping boxes in which industrial photographic emulsion paper is delivered. For A Cigarette End, I opened six standard-size, 30-inch rolls of photosensitive paper and exposed them to light, effectively destroying the possibility of their proper use. No longer able to operate as a vehicle for image production, the paper returns as phantom. Its unexposed layers suspend the act of inscription, while those exposed are inscribed with the surrounding light but display no image, opening a ghostly gap at the center of a process that leaves the material close to dead—a kind of undead artifact. At what point does the non-appearance of an image, or the suspension of an artwork, produce the absence of the artist?

A commodity prevented from realizing its use-value bemoans its suspension in limbo like poor M. Valdemar hypnotized on his deathbed, marooned between waking life and arrested death: “For Godʼs sake! — quick! — quick! — put me to sleep — or, quick! — waken me! — quick! — I say to you that I am dead.” [4]

If Autophantography is an indefinite extension of temporality exploring the preconditions of the image, than the film The Smoking Observer inverts this schema through the use of two materials with well-defined temporal beginnings and ends: a cigarette and a roll of color cinema film. The Smoking Observer departs from the discovery that the synthetic fiber cellulose acetate is used in the manufacturing of both cigarette filters and film base. In the film a cigarette is painted with black-and-white photographic emulsion, left to dry, then is smoked in the red light of the darkroom. As it burns, the flame exposes the light-sensitive chemicals on the cigarette paper just moments before consuming it, along with the tobacco inside. Here the cigarette measures filmic time as a horometrical device that refracts the filmic process. Its burning commemorates the process of self-consumption, a steganographic joss paper producing an image that will forever exist as phantasm. An additional filmic concern is the difference between two types of emulsion technology: that of black-and-white still photography and color cinema film. The image of the red safety bulb (typically used to develop black and white film) is captured here in color motion-picture, yet its light leaves no trace on the emulsion-treated cigarette, folding the discontinuity between disparate photosensitive processes. Mourning filmʼs potential obsolescence is not a sentiment I wish to express; rather, I employ a series of techniques that make visible the asymmetrical relation between advanced reproduction technologies and the precedent technologies they attempt to pronounce dead without remainder.

The final component of the exhibition is a medical bone screw titled ( ⁀ ), the sort used in surgical procedures I underwent last year for femoral neck fractures. Restricted by prescription, these screws exist in a realm between inanimate controlled substance and animated utility within a body. Here it acts as placeholder for the artist, holding the artist’s bones together and suturing the exhibition through spin.

Jason Loebs lives and works in New York. He recently completed the Whitney Independent Study Program, received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, a BFA from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, and attended the Yale Norfolk School of Art. This past summer he attended the Eastern European Residency Exchange with Pavilion Unicredit in Bucharest, Romania. He has had a solo project at Audio Visual Arts, New York, and been in group exhibitions at Galerie Perrotin, Paris; Bortolami Gallery, New York; Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach; NJMOCA, New Jersey; Harris Lieberman, New York; loop-raum fur aktualle kunst, Berlin; Artists Space, New York; Milwaukee International, Milwaukee; CUNY Graduate Center, New York and elsewhere.

 

Posted in Art, Culture | Tagged Art, Essex Street Gallery, Jason Loebs, Jordan Robin, Maxwell Graham | Leave a comment

Opening this Saturday at Showroom 170 – Mary Poppins is a Junkie!

By admin | Published: October 26, 2011

If you find yourself on the Lower East Side this saturday you might want to check out Showroom 170 – a pocket gallery on Suffolk Street (just below Houston) that will be celebrating the opening of their new show Mary Poppins is a Junkie!

Posted in Art, Culture, Parties | Tagged Anne Deleporte, Art, Jeannie Weissglass, Jordan Robin, Showroom 170, Stephen Dean | Leave a comment

A Halloween Celebration with Performa!

By admin | Published: October 25, 2011

This Friday Glynnis McDaris will be co-hosting (in collaboration with Performa 11) an evening of performances, costumes, art, dance and drink at the one and only Santos Party House. Get there early to see the unveiling of Urs Fischer’s special installation.  Get Ready for shadow dancing!  See you on the dance floor!

Happy Halloween!


 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Opening Night of Vis-A-Vis

By admin | Published: October 20, 2011

Last weekend Back Yard Projects, a very special apartment gallery in the East Village curated by Holly Stanton, presented its final show of the season. Vis-A-Vis is a group show featuring works by the likes of Juan Antonio Olivares, John Campolo, Sean Keenan, Isla Hansen and 14 other artists. Vis-A-Vis will be on view until November 5th. Stay tuned for more news on the art and events of Back Yard Projects, and in the meantime, please enjoy snaps from the opening of Vis-A-Vis!

 

 Photos courtesy of Back Yard Projects

Polaroids by Josie Keefe, film courtesy of The Impossible Project 

Posted in Art, Culture, Parties, Photography | Tagged Art, Back Yard Projects, East Village, Holly Stanton, Isla Hansen, John Campolo, Jordan Robin, Josie Keefe, Juan Antonio Olivares, Parties, Sean Keenan, The Impossible Project, Vis-A-Vis | Leave a comment

Bienvenue Grand Palais!

By admin | Published: October 18, 2011

 

DAVID ZWIRNER PRESENTS DAN FLAVIN AT FIAC 2011 IN PARIS
October 20 – 23, 2011
Press preview: Wednesday, October 19, 2 – 5 PM

David Zwirner is pleased to announce the gallery’s participation in this year’s FIAC, held at the Grand Palais in Paris from October 20 to 23, 2011. For this year’s fair, the gallery (Stand B30) will present a significant installation of three related works by Dan Flavin, the American artist recognized for his pioneering installations of light and color made from commercially available fluorescent lights.

The works at FIAC are from 1989 – untitled (to the citizens of the Republic of France on the 200th anniversary of their revolution) 1,2, and 3 – and have been exhibited only once previously, in Flavin’s 1989 solo exhibition at Leo Castelli Gallery in New York, which commemorated the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution.

Brought together for the first time since their initial presentation, these works follow a systematic progression when exhibited together. The notion of seriality and repetition was a consistent theme in Flavin’s work, and this group of works is a prime example of this practice. Seen as a group or individually, these works relate to each other in that the configuration of one accounts for that of another. Viewed together, each expands upon the experience of the others, offering a more complex understanding of each individual work.

Comprised of horizontal 2-foot fluorescent fixtures aligned from floor to ceiling in three bands of color, the composition of each of these works recalls the French flag. In untitled (to the citizens of the Republic of France on the 200th anniversary of their revolution) 1, the blue, white, and red bands of color are placed side by side along a wall; in untitled (to the citizens of the Republic of France on the 200th anniversary of their revolution) 2, the red lamps project out from the wall and face right; and in untitled (to the citizens of the Republic of France on the 200th anniversary of their revolution) 3, both the blue and the red lamps project from the wall and face to the left and right, respectively.

The Estate of Dan Flavin has been represented exclusively by David Zwirner since 2009, and in the same year the gallery presented Dan Flavin: Series and Progressions. On the occasion of the exhibition, David Zwirner published an extensive monograph devoted to the artist’s work in collaboration with Steidl, Göttingen. The publication contains installation photographs from the exhibition, along with rare archival documentation and new scholarship on the artist by contributors that include Tiffany Bell, Dan Graham, Anne Rorimer, Richard Shiff, and Alexandra Whitney. In 2008, Zwirner & Wirth (a gallery on New York’s Upper East Side run by David Zwirner and Iwan Wirth from 2000 to 2009) presented Dan Flavin: The Green Gallery Exhibition, which re-staged the seminal exhibition that took place in 1964 at Richard Bellamy’s influential (though short-lived) Green Gallery on West 57th Street, New York (dan flavin: fluorescent light, November 18 – December 12, 1964).

About Dan Flavin
Dan Flavin’s (1933-1996) first solo exhibitions were held at the Judson Gallery in 1961 and the Green Gallery in 1964, both in New York. His first European exhibition was in 1966 at Galerie Rudolf Zwirner in Cologne, Germany; and in 1969, the National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, organized his first major museum retrospective. His work was included in a number of key early exhibitions of Minimal art in the 1960s, among them Black, White, and Gray (Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Connecticut, 1964); Primary Structures (The Jewish Museum, New York, 1966); and Minimal Art (Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, 1968). Flavin’s work would continue to be presented internationally over the course of the pursuant decades, at such venues as the Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, Missouri (1973); Kunsthalle Basel, Basel; Museum Boymans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam (both 1975); Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (1986); and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (1992), among others.

A major museum retrospective devoted to Flavin’s work was recently organized, in cooperation with the Estate of Dan Flavin, by the Dia Art Foundation in association with the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., where it was first on view in 2004. The exhibition traveled from 2005 to 2007 to the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Fort Worth; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Hayward Gallery, London; Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris; Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich; and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles. This first comprehensive, posthumous retrospective of the artist’s work was the culmination of a research effort that included the publication of the catalogue raisonné of Flavin’s work authored by Tiffany Bell.

Flavin’s work is included in major museum collections, and was most recently on view at the Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts in St. Louis, Missouri, in the 2008 solo exhibition, Dan Flavin: Constructed Light.

A major permanent installation of the artist’s work can be found in Marfa, Texas. This large-scale work in colored fluorescent light is installed in six buildings at the Chinati Foundation. Initiated in the early 1980s, the final plans were not completed until 1996, and the work was inaugurated in October 2000. Another long-term installation can be seen in Bridgehampton, New York, where in 1983 Flavin began renovating a former firehouse and church to permanently house several of his works and to serve as an exhibition space and printmaking facility for local artists. The building was named the Dan Flavin Art Institute, and is maintained by the Dia Art Foundation. Currently on view until January 2012 at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. is Flavin’s major “barrier” work untitled (to Helga and Carlo, with respect and affection), 1974.


Posted in Art, Culture, Travel | Tagged Art, Dan Flavin, Dan Flavin: Series and Progressions, David Zwirner, FIAC, French Revolution, Grand Palais, Jordan Robin, Paris | Leave a comment

Happy 10th Anniversary Architecture for Art!

By admin | Published: October 14, 2011

If you happen to find yourself in Hillsdale tomorrow you’re in for a treat. Tomorrow marks the 10th anniversary of Architecture for Art and the upstate gallery will be celebrating the occasion in the midst of their exhibition – The International Show – curated by Annina Nosei and featuring the work of Kocheisen + Hullmann, Tsibi Geva, Madeleine Hatz, and Izumi Chiaraluce. For more information visit Architecture for Art here.

Posted in Art, Culture, Parties, Travel | Tagged Architecture for Art, Art, Hillsdale, Izumi Chiaraluce, Jordan Robin, Kocheisen + Hullmann, Madeleine Hatz, Tsibi Geva | Leave a comment
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