M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
M The New York Art World ®"All You Need To Know."
 

art reviews

 

 

 

El Museo’s Biennial / The S (Selected) Files
El Museo del Barrio >>
By Ariadna Capasso and Diana Korchak

Paresh Hazra
Eighth Elephant Contemporary
>>
By Joel Simpson

Arturo Cuenca
Paul Sharpe Contemporary Art
>>
By Mary Hrbacek

Gary Schneider
Aperture Foundation >>

By Chris Twomey

Sakico Kawashima
The Artist Network
>>
By E.K. Clark

Will Barnet and his Contemporaries
Babcock Galleries
>>
By Linda Stein

Marina Abramovic
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
>>
By Chris Twomey

Malachi Farrell
Thrust Projects
>>
By E.K. Clark

Photo New York
Metropolitan Pavilion
>>
By Joel Simpson

Liset Castillo, Jonas Pihl
Black and White Gallery
>>
By Mary Hrbacek

Peggy Cyphers, Jason Hackenwerth
The Proposition Gallery
>>
By Chris Twomey

Edward Burtynsky
Brooklyn Museum >>
By Sarah Jorgensen

              


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El Museo’s Biennial / The S (Selected) Files
El Museo del Barrio
By Ariadna Capasso and Diana Korchak

 

This fourth Edition of El Museo’s Biennial / The S (Selected) Files, features works by forty mid-career and emerging Latino / Latin American artists living in the New York metropolitan area. Curated by Deborah Cullen (El Museo del Barrio), Miki García (Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum) and Marysol Nieves (Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico), the exhibition presents a wide array of techniques and media, ranging from the traditional to the experimental, in diverse subject matter.

Recurring themes here deal with gender, race, immigration, and a revival of cultural heritage, such as in Cristina Hernández-Botero’s light boxes with gold pigments from her native Colombia and Carlos Aponte’s hieroglyphs. But most interesting of all is the conceptual thread that becomes apparent under closer scrutiny; the conscious appropriation of verbal and visual codes found in the immediate environment of the artists.

There are departures from the figurative tradition in Patricia Cazorla’s sensitive paintings of women, in which she reclaims the female body, and David Antonio Cruz’s self-portraits that debunk stereotypes surrounding the Latin male. Utilizing a unique visual vocabulary, Nancy Friedemann subverts traditional feminine tasks; creating large-scale ink drawings on mylar that resemble lace.

Quintín Rivera-Toro covered the advertisement billboards along highways in his home town with gigantic photographs of the sky. Un espacio libre is a public art project aimed at beautifying the city of Caguas, Puerto Rico, while critiquing consumerism. Whereas the billboards that clog the visual horizon of Caguas try to sell the highway drivers various consumer goods, Rivera-Toro emphasizes that the most beautiful and essential product of all is the one that is free: Nature.

Another innovative use of “the sign” is found in Richard Garet’s The Liberation of Meaning. While Rivera-Toro reclaims the visual space, Garet addresses our auditory ambiance by extracting phrases from a recording of Uruguay’s major poet, Mario Benedetti, and then reciting his own poetry in hundreds of sound bites. The artist then placed the de-contextualized phrases and words into two “I-Pods” that played randomly. His apparent intention was to separate the words of their meaning, thereby leaving only the quality of the sound. But the words and the tone of voice carry a weight that cannot be erased, and this transforms The Liberation of Meaning into an infinite poem that is continuously being created; one whose endless meanings are assigned by each individual hears it in different context.

Carlos Motta’s work offers insight into why many Latin American artists are concerned with reclaiming their cultural freedom. SOA #3, a work from the series SOA: Black and White Pain-tings is an audio book in which speeches given by graduates of the school of the Americas — the infamous training ground for military personnel intervening in Latin America — are modified. Instead of dogmatic affirmations, the speakers are made to question their own words.

These artists consciously alter their environment in order to make it “theirs.” Inundated, both at home and abroad, with the rules of the global market place, they choose to take creative action, making art works that subvert these new rules.

Through 1/26/06.


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Paresh Hazra
Eighth Elephant Contemporary

By Joel Simpson

 

The egg tempera paintings of Paresh Hazra (b. 1952) are a revelation. Drawing his brilliant colors and iconography from a native West Bengal and Indian tradition, his treatment overlays stylistic references to Picasso, German expressionists, notably Max Beckmann, and especially the whimsical, gravity defying Marc Chagall, to arrive at gentle send-ups of Hindu and only slightly more distantly, Christian iconography. His lush mermaids swim languidly among the lotuses, their scales and tails in ochres and gold, their skin in pink and blue, reflecting the water around them. They fill the eye with color, texture, form and muted eroticism, while their shadowy eyes seem to remain entirely indifferent to the viewer — not a hint of seduction.

Hazra depicts the blue-skinned Krishna both in a love context with one of his gopis (hand maidens), along with his iconic flute, and as a naked baby on his mother’s lap. These are the most mischievous of all, since he is immodestly exposed for a deity (but not for a baby), and his genitals are as blue as the rest of him. This is a baby, unlike the Christ child, who pees, defecates — and hugs his mommy. But more than this, Krishna, whether he is with his mother or his lover(s) emits a subtle joy, in contrast to the more somber mermaids.

Hazra has other series, including two based on masks that incorporate fiber textures into the surface of the canvas. His eco-masques are mostly in shades of blue and depict a stylized head in a picture frame enveloped by plant tendrils. His [non-eco] masques are in yellow and brown and are portioned into sections by what appears to be pieces of jute. The images are even more simplified — Picasso-like versions of faces, horses, dogs and other creatures. This show presents an artist firmly rooted in Eastern as well as Western traditions, one who draws freely from both with masterful technique, humor and imagination.

12/1 through 12/30.


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Arturo Cuenca
Paul Sharpe Contemporary Art

By Mary Hrbacek

 

Cuenca articulates a unique, sensory vision through imaginative amalgams of the portrait and landscape genres. In several hybrid photo-montages and acrylic paintings, he reinvents the sky as an iconic portrait head that fills the upper format. Images of the literary giants, Oscar Wilde and Marcel Proust, add emotional and intellectual weight to the softly defined portraits that preside over the landscape situated in the format beneath them. The authors, visualized as presiding deities, evoke a spiritual feeling of the eternal.

Conceptually, these images hint that the all-male orientation is a natural and harmonious part of nature's diverse manifestations. In some works, the sexual content is conveyed metaphorically by the stigma of an Anthurium flower. While the phallic symbol is at times placed front and center, this adds to the fun inherent in the fresh, unusual work of this Cuban-born artist.

Cuenca creates the effect of a rare book through the use of softly blurred edges, combined with pale gray and sepia tones. Fading forms add a nostalgic note that elicits a feeling of memory and passing time, while unpainted edges add a Mark Rothko effect.

Both Aesthetic: Proust As Landscape (2005) and the diptych Aesthetic: Wilde As landscape (1997) offer a poetic vision that evokes the telepathy the Bronte sisters employ in their novels, Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights. In the Cuban tradition of inventing new words from everyday vocabulary, the playful title for this series, "Aesthasy," suggests a correlation between sexual ecstasy and the creative ecstasy that comes through aesthetic fulfillment. Another linguistic invention used here, the term "Photosophy," expresses the linking of visual imagery with philosophy.

Cuenca juxtaposes unusual combinations of forms, employing an indirect, watercolor-like technique that veils his strong erotic content without diminishing it's power. His complex, subtle images blend the barriers between representation and abstraction, painting and photography, life and art.

11/1 through 11/26.


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Gary Schneider
Aperture Foundation

By Chris Twomey

 

This sublime exhibition of full frontal nude photo portraits is akin to attending a nude, candlelit cocktail party to which you have invited a gathering your favorite friends. Formal, titillating, as well as endearingly familiar, each photograph speaks, revealing its own secrets.

Photographed between 2002 and 2004, the thirty larger-than-life portraits, both male and female, fill the gallery space. Each person is photographed lying prone against a black backdrop, but the final images are pinned onto the wall in a scroll-like fashion. This gives the figures the impression of standing upright while they boldly gaze out, unfazed, in their nakedness.

The immediacy of the experience, standing among these figures, is enhanced by the matte quality of the print; pigmented ink on photographic canvas. There is no glossy sheen to remind us that these are photographs, and not our imaginary party guests.

The light flickers eerily over their bodies. Small blurs and double exposures associated with long exposure times animate the life which courses beneath each photograph. The lighting effect creates a glowing aura around the bony landscape of their bodies’ individual bumps and dips. Skin tones vary and the delicate blemishes which uniquely distinguish each person add to our understanding of their identity.

VINCENT looks as if he is covered in fur, but in fact he has very dense body hair. WILAMINA looks as if she is made of porcelain; her skin is so radiant that it opalesces. ELLEN has a distended belly that appears to move; she is heavy with child. Most of these individuals look serious, and a few of the portraits seem to suggest a determined endurance.

Using a hand held flashlight, Schneider illuminates a small portion of the body as he or she lay beneath his 8 x 10 studio camera. While he counts the time needed to create a photographic exposure, he methodically circles the flashlight over their bodies, from head to toe. Bathing them in tiny pools of light, he carves out an eye, a cheek, and then a neck, in a process which may take over an hour.

Building up the image in this way creates a time-based performance where the boundaries between viewer and subject become blurred. Schneider, with his light, becomes an active participant and performer in the photograph. His subject is both the viewer and stage for the performance; the camera captures it all. Schneider brakes through the photographer’s dilemma that places him in the position of the voyeur or documentary auteur in the photographic process. Instead, what we have here is a collaborative performance.

The resultant effect is that we see these subjects as people, lying prone but not merely objects in front of a lens. Although nude, they appear humble in their nakedness, truly nude of pretense and fantasy.

Yes, some are exquisite specimens of aesthetic and erotic beauty. Nevertheless, Schneider manages to create a new paradigm for the nude in photography — and this is no small feat in a genre that has been so thoroughly explored as this.

11/11 through 1/7/06.

Ed Note: Aperture Foundation is located at 547 West 27th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10001. Tel 212.505.5555 www.aperture.org


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Sakico Kawashima
The Artist Network
>>
By E.K. Clark

 

In her first solo exhibition, presented in conjunction with the Nagoya University of Fine Arts, Kawashima, a recent graduate, exudes a youthful exuberance and sensuality. Although the artist refers to these works as paintings, they vary in approach from oil on canvas to highly crafted quilted objects using different materials such as satin, lace, black fishnet, pearls and fun fur.

The work encompasses adolescent girl fantasies of sugar and spice and everything risque. Although sweet pinks and pastels abound, there are myriad allusions to vulvae, sperm and phalluses, at times depicted in fluorescent hues. Some of the snake-like phallic forms flourish tassels of fur, others are tied with playful bows, even as they poke under a lace skirt, or embed themselves in a kitten’s head. Sewn clouds, rainbows, orgasmic fountain-like bursts, satin pillows, puffy silk blankets and ovum shapes vie for our attention. Some pieces resemble bouquets, some altars, some feminine bedrooms or mirrored vanities. Imagine the play-room of a teenage girl audaciously transformed into an alluring brothel.

Kawashima’s art celebrates a burgeoning sexuality and young womanhood. Set against the backdrop of her native Japan’s strict social mores, she seems to be declaring her independence and subversiveness with this exhibition. The work is well crafted, and it is clear that she is developing her own voice; it’s a good beginning. Following in the footsteps of feminist artists of the last several decades, she celebrates formerly debased craft-oriented art forms which have emerged over time from the domestic sphere.

through 12/3.


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Will Barnet and his Contemporaries
Babcock Galleries

By Linda Stein

 

Never one to care about whether he fit in with the art trends of the day, Will Barnet has always done his own thing; and this makes him hard to classify — even at the tender age of 94. That is why seeing his work interspersed in this exhibition, with that of his teachers, students, friends and colleagues, brings home the point that his figurative work belongs to no particular school.

Featuring works from each period of Barnet’s long career, the show is all-encompassing. His teachers are represented by Phillip Leslie Hale and Stuart Davis; his students are represented by Tom Wesselman, Eva Hesse, Louise Bourgoise, Cy Twombly, Donald Judd, James Rosenquist and Henry Pearson; his friends and colleagues include Edwin Dickinson, Marsden Hartley, Marisol, Yvonne Thomas, Steve Wheeler, Barbara Adrian, Paul Resika, May Stevens, Thomas Hart Benton, Nancy Grossman, Richard Anuskiewicz, Barnett Newman, Abe Ajay, Milton Avery, Isabel Bishop, Robert Blackburn, Gerson Leiber, Reginald Marsh, Louise Nevelson, Dennis Cossu and David Smith. Seeing the strong, angular shapes in a print by Gerson Lieber, and powerfully collaged elements in a drawing by Nancy Grossman, as representatives of today’s art world, underscores the historical dimension in this show.

Barnet develops a subtle and graceful transition from human form to geometric pattern, with sweeping curves of arms and torsos mirrored in furniture, architecture and landscape. The figurative shapes are linked to their setting with firm anchoring to the picture plan. As figures blend with background, the two become inseparable, so that an L-shaped bent arm echoes an L-shaped chair. Throughout his work over the years, Barnet often creates a shallow and "all-positive" space that squeezes out illusionism, flattening the three-dimensional form into a pattern reminiscent of 18th and early 19th century Japanese prints. This influence is particularly evident in the 1980 serigraph Madame Butterfly and in the 1982 lithograph Reclining Woman, in which simplified pattern and flattened color highlight kimono, fan and trees. In his oil painting Woman in White, depicting wife and preferred model, Elena, Barnet’s compression of space creates a pictorial tension and spatial ambiguity, teasing the eye into following the perimeters of flattened shapes to see how background and foreground coexist tangentially. In his 1970 serigraph Woman Reading, he gives equal attention to positive and negative space with solid areas of bold color.

Many of Barnet’s figures become architectural silhouettes in domestic and mundane settings, emphasizing his fascination with family, pets, and the sea, predominantly with poses and simplified vestments of no specific time or place. The stillness and Seurat-like monumentality, particularly in the dramatic portraits of his sisters, provide a psychological ambiance, making these paintings some of Barnet’s most thought-provoking works.

Through 12/21.


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Marina Abramovic
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

By Chris Twomey

 

Bruce Nauman, Vito Acconic, Valie Export, Gina Pane, and Joseph Beuys’ seminal performance work from the 1960s and 1970s are some of the featured artists in this series of seven consecutive performances by Marina Abramovic at the Guggenheim Museum. Organized as part of Performa 05, a new city-wide “biennial” festival of performance art, this series imbues the festival with a grounded, art historical relevance.

Performance art evolved from 1960’s "happenings," whereby the breaking down of institutional barriers between the art object, the art gallery space, and the picture plane resulted in an art form that used time and the ephemeral nature of performance for its expression.

This interest in "being here now" subverted attempts to commercialize these artists and their defiant, performative gestures; even if commercialization woud come later.
At the Guggenheim, Abramovic re-performs, re-stages and re-films the individualistic work of her peers, based on scripts, interviews and artists statements. Not only does this bring lost work back to life for the current generation, but it also packages these performances as repeatable events. The original artists’ individualistic touch has been replayed with a contemporary, appropriation twist.

For seven nights and on stage for seven hours, Abramovic re-samples the poetic gestures devised by these artists amid the requisite props and devises. The last two nights, she performs an older piece of her own, as well as premiering a new piece entitled Entering the Other Side, which she refers to as a living installation. In this piece she states, "The artist is present, here and now."

For this, the Frank Lloyd Wright designed rotunda, a circular stage used for all of the performances, is covered with a 30 foot funnel in the shape of a woman’s dress, with the artist perched at the top. Clothed, as it were, in this behemoth gown, Abramovic gives off an impression of both fragility and monumentality. She is indeed present, here and now, as she slowly moves her arms and twists her body in controlled, choreographed poses, boldly staring out at the viewers.

Simultaneously, the Guggenheim discreetly displays the six recordings of her prior night’s performances, re-played for those who missed them. These wide angle views show the sheer physical demands she places on herself during the course of the performances; demands that include, burning, cutting and exposing her body for hours at a time. With that knowledge, viewing her final piece elicits empathy for her self-imposed suffering, as well as an uneasy tension for her precarious position.

The shift in focus from a commercial art object for sale, to that of a personal experience, unique in each performance, speaks to the rebellious spirit of performance art. Could it be that the renewed interest in this art form indicates a shift in attitudes, a longing for something unique in today’s market place of mass-produced image handlers?

11/9 through 11/15.


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Malachi Farrell
Thrust Projects

By E.K. Clark

 

Malachi Farrell’s Nothing Stops a New Yorker, an installation comprised of crumpled brown paper bags and empty cardboard boxes piled on the gallery floor, suggests a wacky confusion; until you find the cardboard skyscrapers that rise majestically above the detritus, animated by projecting arms which move smartly to the instructions of a hilarious exercise tape. The second part of the tape, taken from film director Michael Moore’s docu-satire of the 9/11 disaster, takes on a more somber note. What is happening to our liberty, our individuality, as we are manipulated by the powers that be? — the artist seems to be asking.

Farrell is known for his kinetic installations and robotic figures; employing technology and familiar materials in his performing sculptures, he probes social and political issues. In this ironic tribute to New York City, he speaks to us on a visceral level with wit and humor, while investigating the underbelly of the beast.

10/27 through 12/20.

Ed Note: Thrust Projects is located at 114 Bowery #301, New York NY 10013. Tel 212-431-4802

 


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Photo New York
Metropolitan Pavilion

By Joel Simpson

 

October was a rich month for photography. It began with a return to the Metropolitan Pavilion on 18th Street of Photo New York, Los Angeles gallery owner Stephen Cohen’s latest effort to unseat the venerable AIPAD (Association of International Art photography Dealers), Photography Show from its perch as the gate-keeper of fine art photography. Without taking anything away from AIPAD, Cohen’s Photo New York offers some advantages in that its lack of historical precedent opens the door to experimentation. This year’s fair added 37 gallery booths, eight installations and three strolling collecting seminars.

Photography famously documents the world’s real-life triumphs and woes, but this year, a consequence of Hurricane Katrina was playing itself out in real time. New Orleans gallery owner Vicki Bassetti was running on fumes, having packed the entire inventory from her French Quarter photography gallery into a rented van to set up her booth here. Nevertheless, she brought along two of the artists she represents, Sandra Russell Clark and Joyce Linde, who showed their own work: Clark’s languid sepias of Delta countryside and Linde’s toned abstracts of car and window. Hurricane Katrina had taken most of Clark’s prints, although she managed to keep her negatives safe.

At the Watermark Gallery’s booth, Wyatt Gallery (his real name) showed 16x20 prints from Banda Aceh, where the tsunami had hit last December. He had taken his 4x5 camera, mounted on a tripod and slung over his shoulder, and walked through the miles of rubble, talking to people, setting up wherever he saw a shot, and where frequently locals would insert themselves once they saw he was taking a picture. The results are stunning, offering a vivid impression of the desolation facing already poor families whose possessions are all gone and whose modest brick and cement houses were destroyed.

This year’s fair also reached out to some of New York’s Williamsburg galleries, most of which are not specifically identified as “photo galleries”. Among these were Jack the Pelican, showing the work of Michelle Handelman, and the gallery, Chi Contemporary Art, which recently expanded into a groundfloor space on Williamsburg’s fledgling “gallery row” — Grand Street.

An idealistic, though disembodied art group of shifting identity included here was Lynn and Diego del Sol’s Creative Thrift Shop. Though their name suggests low prices and second-hand art works, they actually act as a clearinghouse for contacts, non-exclusively representing up to sixty artists at large, international art events, such as the Shanghai and Venice Biennales and the Zürich Contemporary Art Fair. Their “stable” extends from the unconventional to the wickedly clever.

Charles Guice’s Berkeley gallery, specializing in African American photography, also offered vintage works by masters such as James Van der Zee and recent works by Hank Willis Thomas, Deborah Willis, Joy Gregory, Shiela Pree Bright and Carrie MaeWeems.

One of Thomas’s work stood out in particular, Priceless. Here the photographer has gone beneath the surface in a photograph of a grieving mother surrounded by mourners at her son’s funeral; with a Mastercard® logo in the lower left corner, he over-types the prices of the items connected with the event: “gold chain, $400, suit $250, 9mm pistol $79, bullet 60¢, new socks $2.”

Carrie Mae Weems, who was born in Portland, Oregon, had six pieces in the show from her Shadow Play series and her larger work, The Louisiana Project. Weems, who is also a storyteller, folklorist and videographer, creates images that have layers of meaning. "Shadow" was once a pejorative term for black people, and Weems uses the full semiological field around the word to explore incongruous racial transgressions.

Some of the most striking images were those at the booth of the Palo Alto, California based gallery Modernbook. The larger-than-life frontal nude, a self-portrait holding a cable release by photographer Sylvie Blum, suggests an intentional eroticism, as her breasts ride up on her inflated lungs. The work of Mary Daniel Hobson, also at Modernbook, has a mischievous originality. Her Bottle Dreams series presents landscape segments in different size jars filled with water. Each row of bottles reconstitutes one black and white view — of Macchu Pichu, or of Point Lobos, California. It’s a strange way of adding value to a scene, but these images fascinate. Hobson has discovered a bizarre combination of signifiers, frames, segmentation effects and lens effects. Bottles, water, landscapes — one thinks of the colorful crystals that grew into miniature forests at the bottom of fish bowls that never cease to amaze children.

In another series entitled Mapping the Body Hobson overlays maps, needles and thread, butterfly wings, zippers, strips of sheet music, hooks and match sticks on close-ups of body parts, giving the impression of sutures and inner cutaneous surfaces made from the most unlikely materials. They are piquant, humorously discomforting and powerfully metaphorical.

10/6 through 10/9.


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Liset Castillo, Jonas Pihl
Black and White Gallery

By Mary Hrbacek

 

In her new series of meticulously detailed color photographs, Cuban-born artist Liset Castillo records the intricate systems of tunnels, clover leafs, interconnecting lanes and elevated ramps which she has constructed from sand. The formally imposing structures are fated for a short-lived existence; as such, an aura of mystery surrounds these models. The close-up shots look large, but the scale is indeterminate; and the assumption of permanence — because we assume highways are forever — coupled with the ephemeral quality of sand, fuels a mental conflict in the viewer.

The use of a seaside setting conjures images of incoming tides dissolving the moats and turrets of children's sand castles, while the artificial highways suggest the temporal nature of the ice sculptures that Andy Goldsworthy creates and photographs. Like castles in the sky, a visual metaphor for day-dreams that never materialize in reality, these elegant photographs hint obliquely at a future obsolescence of the car culture, as we know it today.

In a similar vein, Danish artist Jonas Pihl's abstract works extend everyday expectations of the painting genre by grafting forms of installation and sculpture within the two dimensional painting format. In his free-spirited approach to art-making, process takes precedence; he splashes acrylic and enamel paint onto the canvas, photographs the splash, and projects it back onto the format. Then he carefully repaints the splash, forging random shapes into recognizable objects. In doing so, Pihl establishes a unity of duel creative intentions through a dialectic that mediates freedom and control.

10/21 through 11/28.


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Peggy Cyphers, Jason Hackenwerth
The Proposition Gallery

By Chris Twomey

 

Cyphers new work shows selective restraint in allowing the glowing picture field open space for meditation. Shades of light-filled ochre, pale earthy red, and muted gold provide loosely painted backdrops for the calligraphic marks and spills which enliven the picture plane.

This series of work is inspired by the city as open frontier; Cyphers’ personal city where fields of light diffuse through mildly discernable edifices, giving structure to a variety of organic and inorganic painterly motifs.

For example, in Grammercy, strange cellular growths bloom and grow, while the painting Field/City suggests quirky techno patterns jabbering on the borders where Cyphers has playfully exploited the tenuous edges of the picture frame. The blue painting, Pond, is inhabited by milky, out of focus creatures that slip and slide along the viscous surface. We have the sense of looking at gardens, terrariums and even otherworldly landscapes; Cyphers gives us enough “reality” to feel as if we are looking at something familiar, yet at the same time, this is nothing like anything we have seen before.

Working wet onto wet, creating a dialogue between these techno-organic marks, the influence of Chinese Landscape painting is evident, especially where fluid brush strokes and lines build the forms. The layers of paint are textured with light pools of sand and free flowing line drips of gel, as Cyphers intuitively harnesses chance in the service of her composition.

The world she presents us is one in which nature and humans live in animated co-existence, where brushstroke and form, color and surface, carry on a convivial conversation free of strife.

The gallery’s project room offers further meditation on the relationship of humankind and nature with Jason Hackenwerths Belly of the Beast, a sculptural installation that consists of thousands of neon balloons installed in a small closet-like space.

Peeking into the curtained doorway of this space, we are drawn in by the neon magenta and acid green balloon colors which are noxiously articulated by multiple black lights. Stepping further in, it feels like going into an underwater environment, where half inflated balloons absurdly protrude from the walls, their limp, deflated ends trailing like sea anemones. In the center, a wildly overgrown, tree-like balloon structure seems ready to grab you and eat you alive, for your movement has caused a kinetic reaction among the balloons.

Indeed, we find ourselves in a lush garden which has gone amuck. This is an underworld, an anti-world; a latex colony of toxic hues that compels with its own frightening beauty. Both of these artists share with us a glimpse of an alternate reality, positing their distinct observations, while continue their journey to new worlds within.

11/5 through 12/3.

 


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Edward Burtynsky
Brooklyn Museum
By Sarah Jorgensen

 

The Morris and Meyer Schapiro wing of the Brooklyn Museum is paneled with Edward Burtynsky’s photographs, forming a kind of landscape unto itself. At first glance, his large scale photographs appear to be mélanges of pattern, composition, shading, color, and texture akin to artists working in painting and sculpture. Look closer and you see that his subject matter includes scarred granite of quarries, uranium tailings, oil fields, refineries, and factories. Although his work covers the scope of human industry, his powerful investigation of form remains decidedly in the realm of fine art.

For example, Rock of Ages No. 26, a striking composition of pattern and shadow, depicts a negative tectonic formation caused by rock removal in a Vermont quarry. The work makes remarkable use of the patterns created by new and older methods of rock removal; the squares of bolted rocks left by current techniques of cutting contrast with the patterns of lines left by the older process of channeling. These photographs evoke narratives that shape our perception of the landscape; the stories about the techniques used to remove rock, the geologist’s story of the landscape, as well as the art historical timeline of painting, color, light, texture and line.

Dramatic compositions in grey, sepia, and rose, reflecting either fire or sunlight, such as Ship Breaking No. 11, depict towering oil tankers (the largest man-made vessels in history) that dwarf the men who have the unenviable task of breaking them apart. When we learn that these workers are paid menial wages for their treacherous work, the piece takes on different level of sobriety.

Burtynsky’s later work suggests a critique of the global marketplace. For example, phones from the urban mines are put on container ships (both subjects for Burtynsky) and then sent off to China, where workers in cottage industries break them down into component parts. Having the effect of a linked story, the subject matter in his China photographs call attention to the ambiguous dynamic of an area that is becoming the largest manufacturing center in the world. His factory pictures document the urbanization of China. In Mao’s China some 90% of the population lived from the land. Today, 40% live in cities. Shanghai alone has absorbed 4 million people in the last five years.

In one narrative, Burtynsky's camera traces the looming shapes of China's iron and coffee-maker factories, conveying a sense of the tremendous size of these industries. His Three Gorges Dam series captures various stages in the construction of the controversial dam that put countless towns and villages under water to service industry. We see the destruction, displacement and monumental building involved in changing the face of the earth on such an unprecedented scale.

Although he appears to be completely absorbed in the subject of how globalization impacts the natural landscape, Burtynsky maintains that he is always trying to transcend the commercial — to document its capabilities as art. He started out as an artist working with Canadian government grants until his work began to attract the interest of private collectors and public institutions. Working with a traditional film camera to capture his images, he makes high resolution digital scans of his negatives and prints them back onto photographic paper — a practice that is becoming increasingly common among today’s digital savvy, yet traditional photographers.

In his research, Burtynsky seeks out large, human industry — objects built on a scale that inspires a sense of awe that such things can be “man made.” To be sure, the U.S. is no longer a manufacturing center, yet these striking images depicting the very means by which the buttons on our lapels and the coffee-makers in our kitchens are created give us pause.

Through 1/15/06.

 


 
 

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