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"Boomerang (Aboriginal Sin)", 2017, Acrylic and oil on linen, 208.3 x 198 x 4 cm / 82 x 78 x 1.6 inches © the artist, courtesy Capitain Petzel, Berlin, photo: Jens Ziehe

"Boomerang (Aboriginal Sin)", 2017, Acrylic and oil on linen, 208.3 x 198 x 4 cm / 82 x 78 x 1.6 inches © the artist, courtesy Capitain Petzel, Berlin, photo: Jens Ziehe

Charline Von Heyl: Capitain Petzel, Berlin

Ricardo Alessio May 4, 2017

Charline Von Heyl

Capitain Petzel, Berlin

Karl-Marx-Allee 45, 10178 Berlin, Germany

April 28 – June 3, 2017


Charline von Heyl creates paintings that function as self-perpetuating visual events, enigmatic pre- sences silently seducing or disturbing the viewer. They are often funny, but not afraid of poetic depth and even pathos. The colors are active: they shift, empty out or recharge depending on the time of day and the position of the viewer. Interference colors made to engage paradoxically with light con- fuse the hierarchy of tonality. Copper, aluminum-flakes, dirty pastels, charcoal powder, fluorescents but also graphic black and white are laid down in unstable and abused layers to provoking different moods and feelings.


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Download Press Release (PDF)

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Fiona Banner: De Pont Museum, Tilburg, Netherlands

Ricardo Alessio May 4, 2017

Fiona Banner: Runway (AW 17)

De Pont Museum

Wilhelminapark 1
5041 EA Tilburg, Netherlands

29 Apr - 27 Aug 2017

In the vast industrial space of De Pont's main gallery, Banner creates a theatrical mise-en-scène where towering helicopter rotor blades and re-purposed military plane parts become the unknowing cast. Her deft handling of these objects reveals their anthropomorphic potential: Gazelle helicopter rotor blades are reminiscent of totem poles; a pair of Harrier nose cones suggest breasts, and elsewhere faces emerge from the juxtaposition of Jaguar drop tanks with abstract graphite drawings of full stops in different typefaces. Banner has long been fascinated by military aircraft, finding them at once beautiful and horrifying; almost 'prehistoric, from a time before words'.


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Black Tourmaline (Front) & Las escaleras, 2017

Black Tourmaline (Front) & Las escaleras, 2017

Kerry Tribe: Parque Galeria, Mexico City

Ricardo Alessio May 4, 2017

Kerry Tribe: the word the wall la palabra la pared

Parque Galeria,

Puebla 170. Roma Norte
06700. Mexico City DF

May 6 - July 1, 2017


Tribe's new works in video, sculpture and photography playfully literalize ideas around linguistic communication, transnational relations and empathy. The exhibition continues Tribe's investigation of the "speaking subject" who narrates their experience for an audience. The show is organized around a video in English and Spanish called Afasia (2017) which features the artist's friend photographer Christopher Riley, who, at the age of 43, suffered a left hemisphere stroke that severely limited his ability to speak, write and understand language. Despite these challenges, he passionately communicates an appreciation of his life and the vast world around him. The video is projected in a make-shift screening room built from the remains of what had previously been the gallery's front wall.

 

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Tags kerry-tribe
BrianBulter_1.jpg

Cultured: Brian Butler, 1301PE

Ricardo Alessio May 4, 2017

An Open Book by Maxwell Williams

Brian Butler, the owner of 1301PE, holds back on nothing for our two-hour interview. He's held a prime vantage point for more than two decades and we touch on subjects like how in the past few years, big galleries have tried to control artists the same way Monsanto controls seeds (choosing monoculture over biodiversity); how our culture wants "the Harry Potter box set" of a particular artist's works (the finished story, instead of waiting to see how it develops) and how the gallery opened 25 years ago on the inauspicious day that the L.A. Riots began."We sat around for a couple of days with nobody coming to see the exhibition," Butler says, reminiscing back to the inaugural Ericson & Ziegler show in April, 1992.


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Tags tacita-dean, manon-de-boer
Uta Barth, In the Light and Shadow of Morandi (17.01), 2017, face mounted, raised, shaped, Archival Pigment print in artist frame, 48.75 x 52.75 x 1.75 inches (framed), edition of 6, 2 APs.

Uta Barth, In the Light and Shadow of Morandi (17.01), 2017, face mounted, raised, shaped, Archival Pigment print in artist frame, 48.75 x 52.75 x 1.75 inches (framed), edition of 6, 2 APs.

LA Weekly: 15 Female Artists Who’ve Shaped the L.A. Art Scene

Ricardo Alessio April 15, 2017

15 Female Artists Who've Shaped the L.A. Art Scene by Eva Recinos


Uta Barth

Known around the world for her unconventional style of photography, Uta Barth calls Los Angeles home and received her MFA at UCLA in 1985. Barth's compositions usually require that viewers allow their eyes to adjust a little; there seems to be nothing really there, but the faint shapes that come to the surface turn out to be haunting. Her work is a part of major museum collections including those at the Hammer Museum, LACMA and the Getty. 

 

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Installation view

Installation view

Diana Thater: ARoS Triennial (The Garden - The Past), Denmark

Ricardo Alessio April 14, 2017

ARoS Triennia: The Garden - The Past

April 8–July 30, 2017


The first ARoS Triennial will feature major new commissions and large-scale installations across the city of Aarhus, Denmark. Focusing on depictions of nature throughout history, the Triennial will be split into three sections: The Past, The Present and The Future. The launch of the Triennial will coincide with Aarhus’ year as European Capital of Culture.

The Past, which opens April 8, will span 400 years and will illustrate man’s relationship with nature: from the powerful orchestration of the baroque garden, the mathematically constructed landscapes of neo-classicism, and the sensuous gardens of the rococo to the monumental use of nature in land art projects and modern man’s impact on nature portrayed in contemporary art. The Past will provide the historical context for the Triennial theme and will be spread across several levels of the ARoS Aarhus Art Museum, comprising more than 100 works (paintings, installations, video art, and sculptures) by artists including Nicolas Poussin, Paul Gauguin, Edvard Munch, Robert Smithson, and Meg Webster.

The Past will feature works by Nicolas Poussin, Claude Lorrain, Antoine Watteau, Jacob Isaacksz. van Ruisdael, John Constable, Caspar David Friedrich, Edvard Munch, Paul Gauguin, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Maurice de Vlaminck, Emil Nolde, Max Liebermann, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Paul Klee, Max Ernst, Jean Arp, René Magritte, Giorgio de Chirico, Robert Smithson, Joan Jonas, Richard Long, Diana Thater, Meg Webster, Olafur Eliasson, Damián Ortega, Darren Almond, and Pamela Rosenkranz.


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Uta Barth, Untitled (17.04), 2017, Archival Pigment print in artist frame (welded aluminum, optium), 75.75 x 64.875 x 2.5 inches (framed), edition of 6, 2 APs. Installation view 1301PE. 

Uta Barth, Untitled (17.04), 2017, Archival Pigment print in artist frame (welded aluminum, optium), 75.75 x 64.875 x 2.5 inches (framed), edition of 6, 2 APs. Installation view 1301PE. 

LA Weekly: 5 Art Shows to See in L.A This Week

Ricardo Alessio April 14, 2017

Quietly serious - Uta Barth at 1301PE by Catherine Wagley


One six-foot-high image in longtime L.A. artist Uta Barth's current show at first looks like a painting when you see it hanging at 1301PE. In fact, it's an especially sharp photograph of the white-painted exterior wall of Barth's studio. The sunlight makes the subtle inconsistencies of the paint job apparent and, as with much of Barth's best work, the image's quietness has more intensity than serenity. It requires your attention and demands that you acknowledge all its mundane but idiosyncratic details.  

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Image Credits: T. Kelly Mason.  

Image Credits: T. Kelly Mason. 
 

Diana Thater: "A Runaway World " at The Mistake Room, Los Angeles

Ricardo Alessio April 2, 2017

Diana Thater: A Runaway World

The Mistake Room

1811 E. 20th Street
Los Angeles, CA 90058

April 1 - June 3, 2017


For her exhibition at The Mistake Room, Thater will present two works she produced in Kenya in 2016 and 2017. Conceived as both portraits and landscapes, the works will be staged within a unique architectural environment of free-standing screen structures that the artist designed. The works give us glimpses into the lives and worlds of two species on the verge of extinction—rhinos and elephants—and the illicit economies that threaten their survival.

The first work, As Radical as Reality, revolves around Sudan—the world's last surviving male white rhino. Protected from poachers by guards who accompany him at all times as he roams the grounds of the Ol Pejeta Conservancy, Sudan represents the last hope of his species but he has shown no interest in mating with the two female rhinos who also live at the Conservancy. When he dies, at some point in the near future, so will the rest of his kind. Thater was given unprecedented access to film Sudan and his guards. Over the duration of a week, Thater filmed Sudan and his human companions in the wild during the day and at night—capturing their daily lives from a very intimate perspective. For Thater, a species is a world unto itself—a configuration of existence that is worthy of our contemplation. Thus, in this work, Thater attempts to metaphorically assemble a portrait not only of a species, but also of an entire world coming to an end.

The second work, A Runaway World, captures a herd of Elephants that Thater filmed in Kenya's Chyulu Hills earlier this year. The elephants meander through on one screen as images of the terrain in which they reside are projected onto an intersecting one; gesturing to the relationship between the natural environment and survival. This changing landscape, forged by shifting images of majestic beings and the land between Mount Kilimanjaro and the Chyulu Hills, comes into focus only momentarily—reminding us of the fragility of the world and our complicity with its longevity.

Presented together in the space, this portrait of beasts and this landscape inhabited by beasts ask us to confront urgencies that are going to shape the well being of a future all species will inhabit and to accept a reality that too many today are attempting to frame as fiction. 


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pp bloomberg brilliant ideas.jpg

Bloomberg: Philippe Parreno on "Brilliant Ideas"

Ricardo Alessio March 30, 2017

Bloomberg's 'Brilliant Ideas' documentary


Each 'Brilliant Ideas' episode profiles an artist from around the world who specializes in a medium that could include sculpture, painting or performance art. The artists discuss their lives and careers, including how they got into the industry and what inspires their work.


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Tags philippe-parreno
Visitors in Turbine Hall.

Visitors in Turbine Hall.

SUPERFLEX: Hyundai Commission for the Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, Britain

Ricardo Alessio March 26, 2017

SUPERFLEX

Turbine Hall, Tate Modern

3 October 2017 - 2 April 2018


1301PE is pleased to announce that Danish collective SUPERFLEX will undertake this year's Hyundai Commission for the Turbine Hall, opening on 3 October 2017. It will be the next in this major series of annual site-specific commissions by renowned international artists.

 

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The New York Times, Superflex Is Chosen for Tate Modern Turbine Hall

The Guardian, Danish artists Superflex next for Tate Modern Turbine Hall 

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© Ann Veronica Janssens. Photo : Isabelle Arthuis

© Ann Veronica Janssens. Photo : Isabelle Arthuis

Ann Veronica Janssens: ”MARS” at the Institut d'art contemporain, Villeurbanne/Rhône-Alpes, France

Ricardo Alessio March 26, 2017

Ann Veronica Janssens

MARS

Institut d'art contemporain - Villeurbanne/Rhône-Alpes

From 24 March to 7 May 2017

 

1301PE is pleased to announce MARS, a large-scale solo exhibition of Ann Veronica Janssens' work at the Institut d'art contemporain. The entire space will be dedicated to new pieces referring to existing works.

Ann Veronica Janssens bases her work on the act of perception, developing an experimental research through the prism of physical phenomena such as light, colour, sound, or mist. Using stripped-down gestures, the artist activates 'undefined zones' between blindness and revelation. These gestures seek to render manifest the indefinable and transitory nature of the very material of reality. Duration, space, and movement determine their primordial conditions.


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Top Five Buddy Cop Films, Installation view, Steve Turner, March 2017

Top Five Buddy Cop Films, Installation view, Steve Turner, March 2017

Kerry Tribe: “Top Five Buddy Cop Films” at Steve Turner, Los Angeles

Ricardo Alessio March 26, 2017

Top Five Buddy Cop Films

Amanda Ross-Ho & Diedrick Brackens, Larry Johnson & Adam Stamp, Joel Kyack & Lisa Anne Auerbach, Kerry Tribe & Edgar Bryan, Lila de Magalhaes & Roni Shneior, curated by Santi Vernetti

Steve Turner

6830 Santa Monica Blvd.

Los Angeles CA 90038

March 23 – April 29, 2017


Top Five Buddy Cop Films is an exhibition of collaborations between five pairs of Los Angeles-based artists, curated by Santi Vernetti.

On paper, the practices of Kerry Tribe and Edgar Bryan couldn't be more dissimilar. Tribe works mostly in film, video, and installation, while Bryan works mostly in painting, book design, and clay. What they share is a collection of overlapping interests and approaches to making. Both explore the boundaries and possibilities of gesture and representation within their chosen mediums. They also share a rich history of collaboration with other artists, friends, and strangers.

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Download Press Release

Tags kerry-tribe
Uta Barth, In the Light and Shadow of Morandi (17.01), 2017, face mounted, raised, shaped, Archival Pigment print in artist frame, 48.75 x 52.75 x 1.75 inches (framed), edition of 6, 2 APs.

Uta Barth, In the Light and Shadow of Morandi (17.01), 2017, face mounted, raised, shaped, 
Archival Pigment print in artist frame, 48.75 x 52.75 x 1.75 inches (framed), edition of 6, 2 APs.

Artillery: Uta Barth at 1301PE

Ricardo Alessio March 26, 2017

Uta Barth by Ezra Jean Black

Uta Barth's work has always dealt with the way images and perceptions are shaped through both the tools and conventions of image making. Much of that work has addressed more specifically divergences between those synthetically shaped and focused perceptions and expectations conditioned by convention. In the body of work currently on view at 1301PE, shape itself is made the 'foreground' threshold for what becomes a dazzling play on the essential materials of photography and image-making generally. The subject is nominally a bar or serving console with bottles, decanters, vases and other vessels arrayed across it – the kind of still life that was a favorite subject of Italian painter, Giorgio Morandi; and In the Light and Shadow of Morandi becomes clearly, not only an homage to Morandi, but itself a kind of painting with refracted light. The process is willful and deliberative in every respect, yet also admitting of mystery. 'Field' here is shaped subtly into simple polygons and floated within the framed squarish rectangle – echoing the severe rectilinear geometry of the bar. The bar is mostly blacked out; but even here, Barth subtly conflates and confuses its structure with its shaped polygonal support. The angle seems to shift, elongate, flatten. Slits or storage spaces (or apertures?) reveal openings or other vessels beneath the bar's surface. The focus and emphasis are on the silhouetted verticals of the vessels infused by the (mostly horizontal) refracting light and its luminescent color – dazzling and ethereal. The vessels are rendered as distinct worlds, alternately separated crisply by white space or clustered close; yet not bleeding so much as displacing each other, each preserving its specific transmuted atmospheres in a spectrum of glass-inflected colors: chartreuse veering into olive (or even 'bottle') green; azure and sapphire; amber, rust and ox-blood red; and a host of smoky grays. Occasionally a refracted wave makes a jagged trajectory across the field; zones of color are layered within a vessel; or a human arm (similarly transformed and luminescent) intrudes upon the tableau to grasp a glass or vessel, setting off its own disturbances – e.g., an inverted parabola of light. 'Ghost' lights linger here and there upon the opaque blacks of the bar. In another Untitled series (only one of which is on view here), Barth fixes her thoughtful gaze on an exterior wall – as powerfully and poetically as she does on the classic Morandi motif. This is work that stands in no one's shadow. 

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Uta Barth, 2017. Installation view 1301PE. 

Uta Barth, 2017. Installation view 1301PE. 

KCRW: Uta Barth at 1301PE

Ricardo Alessio March 26, 2017

Uta Barth at 1301PE

Hunter Drohojowska-Philp praises the photographer's skill with light and shadow.


Uta Barth is best known for her photographs chronicling the effects of light in her studio, images that are minimal in both their appearance and sources. Her exhibition In the Light and Shadow of Morandi at 1301 PE is a more dramatic intervention. By placing colored glass vessels on a table in her studio, she photographed the effect of light passing through them to cast colored, rippling, fanciful shadows.

The show is an ode to the modern Italian artist Giorgio Morandi, who repeatedly painted still lifes of bottles, bowls and pitchers in a monochromatic and poetically simplified manner. Barth follows his method of returning repeatedly to similar compositions in order to concentrate on the relationships between the shapes of different vessels, the effects of light, whether radiant or cloudy, the range of possible colors.

Barth is not slavishly copying but borrowing from Morandi to analyze the differences between the individual perception of a painter and the camera's eye. Barth compensates for the parallax distortion of photography by combining different points of view in a single image. Objects appear both solid and translucent. Are we seeing the actual vessels or just their reflections and shadows? Heightening the effect, each photograph is presented on a matte that is cut to correspond to the black table bearing the vessels, which adds to the illusion of receding perspective. One edge of the matte is colored by Barth — yellow, blue — in a way that is scarcely noticeable but still adds a sense of containment. A shadow of the artist's hand in the arrangement is included in some pictures, as it has in some of her past work, as though the artist wants her intellectually and perceptually evolved art to retain a sense of self.


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View of "Blake Rayne," 2016–17. Foreground: A Line, 2013. Background, from left: Untitled, 2010; Untitled, 2010. Photo: Peter Molick.

View of "Blake Rayne," 2016–17. Foreground: A Line, 2013. Background, from left: Untitled, 
2010; Untitled, 2010. Photo: Peter Molick.

Artforum: Blake Rayne, Blaffer Art Museum, University of Houston

Ricardo Alessio March 3, 2017

Blake Rayne

BLAFFER ART MUSEUM, UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON


I have seen the work of Blake Rayne in bits and pieces over the years, and in each instance I have been puzzled by what I like to call the ugly ducklings nestled within his installations. By this I mean the one work out of a gaggle of beauties that seems to be deliberately, aggressively out of place. For example, the yogurt container–cum–projection screen perched on the windowsill of Campoli Presti's London gallery back in 2012 (Yogurt Cinema, 2014). In a mostly pristine exhibition, it stood out like a sore thumb.

Sometimes the clash makes sense. The decision to hang paintings next to their wooden transport crates worked marvelously in the 2008 exhibition "Dust of Suns" at Miguel Abreu Gallery in New York, reminding us, once again, that canvases are objects, too. I therefore waited with bated breath for Rayne's midcareer retrospective, curated by Javier Sánchez Martínez, in which the ugly ducklings, with the additional context that only such overviews can provide, would finally become glorious swans.

Or so I thought. Instead of finding peaceful resolution, Rayne's oeuvre seems at war with itself. Take, for example, the atrium-like entry gallery, the first of the show's two rooms, in which Rayne's well-regarded series of canvases that have been folded, sprayed, and sewn (in that order) are understandably highlighted. However, as if to slight their elegance, a gang of incompatible objects—a book of felt (A Line [Almanac], 2013), glasses on a wood table next to a plant in a cardboard box (Table of Contents, 2010), a plastic bottle (Untitled, 2016)—loiters at the center of the room. I suppose the two sets (paintings and things) share a readymade quality. But even so, their visual incongruity overshadows any sense of filiation.

The placement of works in the second room only accentuates the discord. A small squiggly red, white, and blue canvas, Untitled, 2012, neighbors five of Rayne's iconic wall works from the series "Cover Letter," 2010, featuring felt letter a's drooping off their canvases onto the floor. Since I don't think an homage to Brice Marden's "Cold Mountain" paintings or Robert Morris's antiforms is intended, I can only assume that the disjunction between pictorial and sculptural, smooth and textured, line and letter, is the goal here.

Everywhere you turn, unlike is pitted against unlike, most jarringly whenever one's gaze crosses a towering, eclectically composed mobile of T-shirts, 3-D letters, and a bicycle hanging in the middle of the room. One corner of the room does, however, approach legibility: A pair of Day-Glo, dye-sublimation-printed abstract canvases draped with equally garish vinyl garlands, both Untitled, 2010, are a canny criticism of the arbitrary, decorative impulse underlying so much of today's computer-generated painting. Bracketing these is a pile of the aforementioned felt a's, A Line, 2013, and an André Cadere–esque pole. Altogether, the trio surveys the multiple ways in which color can be used as a sign.

Coming from a lesser artist, such cacophony might indicate a confused mind. But works such as Untitled, 2011, a panel onto which a chart from Cynthia and Harrison White's art-historical text Canvases and Careers (1965) has been silk-screened, show that Rayne is no dummy. The graphic lists by year the number of paintings that each of the Impressionists made over the course of their careers, documenting in numeric form their respective moments of breakthrough. Rayne is all too aware of the complicity between the making and the marketing of art. And indeed, interpretations of his work have tended toward over-cerebralization, earnestly shrouding it in a cloud of semio-speak (abetted by Rayne himself, it must be said). While there is something admirable and even necessary about linking such an artistic practice to the digital and the socioeconomic, I fear that this body of work's most striking feature—namely, the violence of its juxtapositions—has been somewhat downplayed in the artist's critical reception.

It is exceedingly ironic that an oeuvre so hostile to any overarching narrative should so often be explained by one. For it is hard to find a practice with a comparable level of purposeful discontinuity and obfuscation. Rayne's work is neither pastiche nor bricolage, neither assemblage nor pure shock. It would seem that the artist seeks above all to preempt totalization of his practice by any interpretive system, going so far as to refuse to establish a system in the first place. The interpreter's frustration would be akin to sexual frustration, were it not for the fact that the work is so decidedly unerotic. Therefore, the closest thing I can come up with is that emblem of mechanized frustration, the bachelor machine, minus Duchamp's irony and duplicity.

—Paul Galvez

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Petra Cortright, "man_bulbGRDNopenz@CharlesSchwaabSto9ds," 2016 

Petra Cortright, "man_bulbGRDNopenz@CharlesSchwaabSto9ds," 2016
 

LA Times: Petra Cortright's digital paintings, a tangled web of dots and swipes

Ricardo Alessio February 26, 2017

Petra Cortright's digital paintings, a tangled web of dots and swipes by Christopher Knight

Petra Cortright's paintings wedge themselves between the celebrated history of gestural art, mostly Expressionist and abstract, and the past generation's frantic upheaval of established visual norms generated by the emergence and now ubiquity of digital imagery.

Think of them as touch-screen paintings.

If you've ever done a drag-and-drop, you'll have a general idea of the five recent paintings in Cortright's inaugural solo exhibition at 1301PE. Digging around the Internet and using familiar computer software, she cobbles together pictures, palettes and markings into big, mostly dense and tangled compositions for printing on large sheets of rag paper and Belgian linen.

The squiggly marks on the surface recall the oily, swiped residue left behind by fingers on a smartphone or tablet. The big difference is that actual screen marks are tactile, while the smooth, inert surfaces of Cortright's digitally printed paintings are not. There's some tension between old and new conceptions of "the artist's touch," but as yet it's more cerebral than intuitive.

The intuition comes in the compositions. Cortright piles on loops, swoops, scribbles and slathers, invoking the ironic fusion of personal gesture and impersonal mass-production in Roy Lichtenstein's sleek brushstroke paintings from 1965-66. Where he made big gestures, however, which befit the crushing scale of the banality that had come to engulf Abstract Expressionist art, she taps into the sheer volume of today's roaring digital deluge.

Look closely, and an ancient Greco-Roman sculpture or a bunch of gaily colored pansies pokes through the enormous gestural mass. Nearby, in five flash-animation videos on small flat-screens, animals both real and imaginary — deer, fish, unicorn — likewise cavort through similarly gestural fields. These juxtapositions of digital culture with nature and material culture recall interests in video projections by Diana Thater and Jennifer Steinkamp. They're the work's most compelling feature.

In the relationship between these paintings and animations and the abandon of children's finger-paintings and the wackiness of SpongeBob SquarePants-style cartoons, there's also a hint of playfulness. Given the apparent inevitability of the printed work's inert surfaces, which operate like a visual mute button, Cortright would do well to ramp up that mischievousness.


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Tags petra-cortright
"untitled (the tyranny of common sense has reached its final stage, new york times, november 9, 2016)," 2016, acrylic and newspaper on linen, 89 1/4" x 73 1/4".

"untitled (the tyranny of common sense has reached its final stage, new york times, 
november 9, 2016)," 2016, acrylic and newspaper on linen, 89 1/4" x 73 1/4".

T Magazine: Protest Art in the Era of Trump

Ricardo Alessio February 24, 2017

Protest Art in the Era of Trump by M.H. MILLER

Rirkrit Tiravanija

Some of the most famous works of the Thai artist Rirkrit Tiravanija eschew traditional art objects in favor of social interventions, including cooking large meals in galleries and at events like Frieze Art Fair. This painting, "untitled (the tyranny of common sense has reached its final stage, new york times, november 9, 2016)," was made directly following the election, and debuted at Art Basel Miami Beach last December.

"I've been using newspapers for a long time now, and I draw from long lists of quotes floating in my head. It is an ongoing project at this point. In newspapers, I see the contradictions of reality and fiction play out. 'The tyranny of common sense has reached its final stage' is a quote from Aldo van Eyck, perhaps taken out of context, but in the wake of the recent election, the quote resonates."

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‘Blake Rayne: Cabin of the Accused,’ exhibition view, Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston

‘Blake Rayne: Cabin of the Accused,’ exhibition view, Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston

Hyperallergic: Proposing Painting as a Form of Refusal

Ricardo Alessio February 24, 2017

Proposing Painting as a Form of Refusal by Anthony Hawley


Blake Rayne's first midcareer survey is full of linguistic disruptions and quiet repetitions, bringing to mind Bartleby the scrivener's disarming resistance.

HOUSTON — As our 45th president's chief white house strategist tells the media to "keep their mouth shut," as the newly appointed press secretary chastises everyone for unfairly misrepresenting the 2017 inauguration crowds, and as Kellyanne Conway transmutes alternative facts into reality, one wonders what kind of refusal might counter refusal itself. Given a political machine working overtime to silence any competing versions of the truth, how does one counterattack a far right-extremism that touts falsehoods as "telling it like it is"? Like Tom Huhn, chair of Visual and Critical Studies at the School for Visual Arts in New York, put it in a recent piece in the New Yorker, "Part of what makes Trump attractive to many is that he practices a kind of great refusal himself, saying no to just about everything, and thereby appearing to be on the side of human beings liberating themselves from restrictions and hierarchies." As we enter a global political climate where the alt-right is on the rise and a large constituency is convinced that it's being "liberated" by a particular form of refusal, how does one form a refusal of another kind, one that resists and retrieves difference?

One avenue might be something akin to Herman Melville's infamous "Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street." In it, a Wall Street lawyer hires a new clerk who, after an intense period of impressive work, simply refuses to make another copy or do any of the other office tasks expected of him. Whenever the lawyer asks Bartleby to do something, Bartleby quietly utters, "I would prefer not to." The phrase beguiles the lawyer: It's not exactly a bold-faced rebuttal, nor is it walk-out, a workers' strike on the streets. While the lawyer continues to press Bartleby to do various tasks, the scrivener instead does less and less. Bartleby eventually starts living in the office as he maintains his staunch and paralyzing "I would prefer not to."

I thought about Bartleby while viewing Blake Rayne: Cabin of the Accused at the Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston. Rayne's first midcareer survey is full of linguistic disruptions and quiet repetitions, bringing to mind the scrivener's disarming resistance. Wall Street doesn't know the act of "preferring not to" — the simple statement has so much power not just because it interrupts but because it also creates a lingering silence in its lack of alternatives. For me, Rayne's oeuvre and exhibition embody a similar act in the various refusals.

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SUPERFLEX, Hospital Equipment (2014) (Image: Anders Sune Berg,  courtesy the artists)

SUPERFLEX, Hospital Equipment (2014) (Image: Anders Sune Berg,  courtesy the artists)

The Art Newspaper: How an art work could literally save lives in Syria

Ricardo Alessio February 19, 2017

How an art work could literally save lives in Syria by Jose Da Silva

Danish collective SUPERFLEX's hospital equipment installation will be shipped to war-torn country after exhibition

 

The Danish art collective SUPERFLEX will unveil today (17 February) a new installation called Hospital Equipment, which consists of functioning surgical equipment that will be shipped to a Syrian hospital once the exhibition is over. The collective describe the work as "a ready-made upside down, since we not only take a ready-made object into an art context, but we bring it back into the world again".

The surgeon's table, surgical tools and mobile lamp that form the work at the Von Bartha gallery in S-chanf, Switzerland, will be packed-up and transported to the Salamieh Hospital in Hawarti, a village in the southwestern Hama region, following the dismantling of the show on 18 March. All that will be left of the work will be three "slightly different and unique" photographs, a gallery spokeswoman says, while the rest of the piece carries out its practical functions in the hospital. But, "as much as it is an operation table in the gallery, it is an artwork inside the hospital," the artists say.

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Ana Prvački collection, estampe Shunga, 1920

Ana Prvački collection, estampe Shunga, 1920

Ana Prvacki: Shunga lecture-performance at the Boghossian Foundation, Brussels

Ricardo Alessio February 1, 2017

Boghossian Foundation – Villa Empain, Brussels

Shunga, the Japanese Erotic Prints


Lecture-performance by Ana Prvački

1 February 2017, at 7 pm

 

In the framework of Embassy of Uncertain Shores, Ana Prvački will hold a lecture-performance on Shunga. The word Shunga means erotic art in Japanese and refers to graphic images of sexual activity. The intentions of Shunga are: stimulation, consolation, seduction, education, veneration and amusement. Their influence is profound and inspiring.

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