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Tag: Francesca Gabbiani
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Refuge from the Inferno: L.A.’s Best Summer Group Shows
‘What is it with dudes and trees?’ I wonder for a second as I’m about to put this up on-line—thinking more about Shakespeare’s pastoral romantic comedy than the cool oasis of a summer group show René-Julien Praz has curated at Praz-Delavallade’s L.A. premises. (Though I suppose I could ask Paul McCarthy, who produced a somewhat notorious rendition along these lines for Paul Schimmel’s landmark Helter Skelter exhibition for MOCA in 1992.) But then I’m a bit of a tree-hugger myself, though it would never occur to me to abuse them with romantic sentiments of any kind. (Nor political for that matter.)
Shakespeare’s As You Like It creaks a bit (for the Bard) a few decades after the first encounter; but there’s no getting around its pastoral charm. I was about to say ‘melancholy charms’, which makes no sense—except actually it does a bit. (Consider Jaques: Shakespeare wrote his own songs for the show; but consider the possibilities of a 20th century update. You don’t suppose Noel Coward wrote “World Weary” for him, do you?) I mean how could I not like something so deeply trans? That had to come across on some subconscious level. Of course the Duke has to exile Rosalind. The less-than-perfectly court-adapted Orlando is scarcely aware of the extent to which he has overthrown the ‘natural order’. Rosalind consciously defies it.
Klea McKenna, “Palms #2,” 2017 Human relations with trees are a bit strained lately. Having thinned out their ‘herd’ with our demands for paper, building materials and their many attractive by-products, we’ve failed to reciprocate by thinning out our own predatory hordes and checking our continuous stream of toxic emissions into the environment we share, thereby threatening our mutual survival. Who can say how Shakespeare would have updated his settings? He would scarcely recognize his drought-stricken Albion this summer. Amazingly, Arden (the Ardennes?) might still bear some resemblance to its ancient majesty, notwithstanding Belgian and French development and the trail of destruction the Germans left between Belgium and France 75 or so years ago. But Jaques’ line would probably be something along the lines of ‘I told you so.’
Summer is a time for group shows everywhere, and not just in L.A.; but they are particularly rich this summer in L.A. and offer brief escape—not necessarily to Arden or Arcadia (though come to think of it, Los Angeles County has its own Arboretum in the County’s own ‘Arcadia’), but nevertheless to an air-conditioned space, which this particular summer might actually be life-saving.
Sometime this year, Tarrah von Lintel realized that her gallery was entering its 25th year—half a world away from its origin point (Munich), but having nurtured rich associations with many artists along its trajectory through New York to Los Angeles. Parallel to her collectors, von Lintel’s relationships with the artists and their works have amounted to an on-going dialogue with their processes, ideas and obsessions—and a larger dialogue with the art and culture for which the work is a focal point. These include many of the artists for whom von Lintel has assumed representation here in L.A., including Farrah Karapetian, Canan Tolon, Christopher Russell, Carolyn Marks Blackwood, Christiane Feser, and Floris Neusüss; but also artists who von Lintel has long represented, including Joseph Stashkevitch, Antonio Murado, and Roland Fischer. A few of these have yet to mount solo shows with the gallery in Los Angeles, including Tokyo-based Izima Kaoru, who followed a long career in fashion photography with several iterations of Landscapes With A Corpse (a number of which bear uncanny parallels to Melanie Pullen’s High Fashion Crime Scenes), and more recently a high-concept follow-the-sun series of acutely refracted photographs of the sun abstracted to a line or curve.
A conceptual blur parallel to the willful confusion and commingling of media (especially photography and painting – or work that resembles one or the other) is a through-line that runs through much of this work, including that of artists no longer represented by von Lintel. In addition to a first in-person encounter with Kaoru’s abstracted Tokyo winter solstice, it was interesting to revisit ‘zero-degree’ work by both Sarah Charlesworth (a faintly limned Book diffused in a pool of white light from 1999) and the aggressively etched chromatic striations of Marco Breuer (from 2003 – Pan (C-245))—a kind of drawing-by-extraction (that makes for an interesting transition to the work of, say, Edward Burtynsky, whose principal subject is the scarrified earth that is one of the most visible and dramatic legacies of the anthropocene). The contrasts in mood and medium are both refreshing and startling. Compare the near-stridency of the Breuer with Klea McKenna’s more recent gentle rubbing on gelatin silver paper in Palms #2 (2017).
Von Lintel was en route to France by the time I visited the show, but she may be back in L.A. before the show closes (August 18th); and she’s serious about engaging the gallery’s audience in an on-going dialogue about the work and the artists. With this notion of a gracious engagement with the gallery’s visitors in mind, the rear gallery has been staged as a kind of salon—replete with classic 20th century furniture and accessories—designed by Carole Decombe; and I can’t imagine a more delightful refuge on the kinds of blistering days we’ve been having in Los Angeles. Von Lintel may continue her ‘salon’ into the fall—but this is a show worth seeing regardless.
Patrick Nickell, “Ideals of strength and beauty,” 2016 As is pretty clear from some of the (mostly photographic) work just referenced, there is considerable continuity between medium and concept in the execution of any work of art. However idea-driven the work may be, no small amount of thought and effort are invested in its visualization and execution. In the contemporary post-conceptual landscape, artists increasingly feel free to articulate and enlarge upon ideas and concepts through engagement with the materials themselves and processes that are continuously improvised, modulated, and reinvented. There was never anything remotely oxymoronic about Carl Berg’s Conceptual Craft exhibition at Denk Gallery last year; and that remains true in this year’s far more diverse and expansive iteration. You could even find parallels to the artists’ treatment of materials between some of the work in the Von Lintel show and this show. Consider the drama of the iridescent chromatics in Tim Ebner’s seemingly folded, pleated and corrugated squares of powder-coated forged steel; or George Stoll’s ethereal parabolas and catenary curves of colored disks and glass beads. Stoll’s work often plays ironically upon notions of celebration and festivity—a zero-degree abstraction of human vanity, so to speak. (Or the inverted vanitas, where the commonplace and utilitarian is invested with a transitory illumination.) The ephemeral is given a notional permanence or duration, the intangible given material mass.
Patrick Nickell’s glass sculptures go directly to that domain of the ideal and/or idealized—the paradox of giving concrete form to, as one of the work’s titles express it, “something that can’t be found.” Or what if it can be found—albeit under an electron microscope. Or a loom? Or beneath a pattern-cutter’s paper or muslin? Or rendered, as Rachel Lachowicz has done here with C Lycra Knit (2018), in a kind of cyan-blue plexiglas—though conceivably I’m reading too much into Lachowicz’s choice of color. (Lachowicz has used monochromatic ‘signatures’ before, however—e.g., most notably in her 2017 tour de force crimson installation, Lay Back and Enjoy It.)
This is a very refined sort of craft—something that can conceivably be held in the hand as well as the mind’s eye—yet something that, as Lachowicz’s work indicates, can be infinitely extended in any conceivable direction under a variety of pre-set conditions. There are few if any limits (certainly not in our post-conceptual domain); and the furthest extremes of this range can be pretty expansive indeed. Consider Gjoj de Marco’s Replica of A Confessional Central Section – Cinema Prop F1-1808 A (2018), looking pretty much like what it must have once been in goddess only knows what movie or movies. These sorts of properties get reused and recycled quite a bit. (I mean that’s why studios have art departments and property masters.)
But here’s the thing: what might be held in the hand (or two), its shape, texture, physical dimension and tactilely registered detail, is capable of its own free-form and unpredictable extension into other worlds or dimensions that emerge exclusively from the artist’s imagination—or that imagination in its random encounter with all phenomena and signifiers in its orbit. Kristen Morgin turns a random audiotape cassette—picked up at a garage sale from the looks of it, now stained and battered (though apparently with most if not all of the song titles spelled out—not an insignificant detail here)—into a trapdoor into the universe. The source object is an old country music hit, but Morgin’s There Goes My Everything (2018) transforms it into a cosmic explosion. Before you spiral off into the Milky Way, there’s more. If one object throws you down an astral chute, consider a juxtaposition of two, say Death Wish and Pierre Who Didn’t Care (referencing both the Brian Garfield thriller-turned Charles Bronson movie and the Sendak classic), or a Pretty Mick Jagger and Free Kittens (the cover of the Performance soundtrack with its stylized portrait of Jagger, with a random yard sale sign).
A number of works invoke this sense of infinite expansion more specifically (e.g., Ross Rudel’s subtle chromatic intervention on a zig-zag pleated ‘infinite column’, Blue Stripe (2016); or Tom LaDuke’s full-fathom talismanic Oceans (2015) with its delicately filigreed pewter head planted atop a water-washed stone). It was equally bracing to see work that unpacked the ‘concept’ of craft (or technique) itself (e.g., Sean Duffy’s Sfumato, 2018).
Denk is one of the most beautiful spaces downtown to view art, and there is nothing in this show that does not richly plumb the pleasures of both concept and craft.
My favorite among these shows, though, might be the aforementioned Praz-Delavallade show (but then, as I said, I’m quite mad about trees). I’m also a lover of great painting—and there’s a lot of it here, alongside painterly work in other media, including video (e.g., Jim Shaw). René-Julien Praz hasn’t made the gallery over into an Arden (or I suppose Ardennes would be equally apt for this particular gallery’s directors), although he sets the mood as we’re ushered towards the ‘birch grove’ wallpapered rear of the gallery, with Jennifer Steinkamp’s gently undulating poplars whispering alongside from their darkness in the midst of this otherwise immaculately white space. But that’s a clue, too. There are dark, or certainly shadowed moments in the midst of this sunlit space. Praz’s ‘Ardennes’ is a series of moments that take our measure of nature, our perception of, and variously willful and passive projections upon it, our fraught co-existence with it, and our yearning to reclaim or recapture its variously fearsome and fragile beauty.
Further into the gallery, we continue to sort out the terms of our approach – our ‘to see and not see’ (to paraphrase Oliver Sacks) ‘forest-for-the-trees’ relationship to reality—as for example in Catherine Opie’s soft focus, barely limned grove of trees (mounted here against the birch-papered wall), Untitled #2 (2012), which I always associate with dark winter evenings. (Some works in this series were, I believe, photographed in such conditions, but not all; and not this one.) Then Kerry Tribe’s installation with video (Forest for the Trees, 2015) spells out the dilemma explicitly. That tentative, conditional approach contrasts starkly with the “radical” and ambiguous space Francesca Gabbiani shows us in a palette pitched some distance from nature. Amber and terra cotta are found in nature, but Gabbiani effectively denatures them against a backdrop of black and deep purple with a neon glow. A ragged frond of fern and few tufts of grass are the last earth-bound remnants of this “destruction.” Then there are the remnants of the human-built environment here – joists or louvers, lumber planks or trim that give evidence of a structure on this site. It’s as if that amber volume rising to the upper edge of the canvas were a kind residual aura of what was once “radical.”
There are no apparent roots to return to here. Nature’s tenuous hold seems to melt away – like those ‘purple mountains majesties’ of what was once a beautiful continent (and planet). On the wall opposite, James Welling exploits a similar palette in a kind of deliberate reversal—foliage rendered on Kodak Metallic Endura paper (this is all we’re told) through what I’m assuming are Photoshop manipulations of what looks like a photo-negative image, or possibly two layered images (007, 2017). There’s also a vague hint of flame here, reminding us of the flames consuming so much foliage around us. Welling foregrounds purple leaves or blossoms against a bright yellow background in a companion image (001). It’s all a bit too bright, which can only bring on dark thoughts; and it’s as if Kim McCarty is offering our eyes an oasis of calm in her two spare watercolors—her signature minimalist brush trace here rendered almost ghostly, what might be a trace of lavender pressed from the flower (of a marijuana plant) dissolving into the white paper as if into the light itself.
Disappearance is a subsidiary theme here. (Not sure if that has anything to do with Shakespeare—exile was more or less the thing there.) Certainly we’re not likely to see ‘sea-changes’, much less ‘coral’, which we’ve mostly killed off (but then that’s a different play). Cole Sternberg addresses this erasure more or less directly (a wooded sky being erased, 2017) with its hillside treeline sinking beneath a mottled pink sky. But there is that moment we cling to for its melancholy beauty (like Jaques?)—Matthew Brandt distilling that melting-away to the sublime in silver on silver gelatin (AgXBD752A, 2018) in a moment that seems to simultaneously pull us 200 years back even as we see our likely terminus 200 (okay 20) years forward.
The sublime will bury us (as Charles Gaines documents chillingly in Absent Figures: Rainier, Version 2, Marine Transport Files, 2000); but we leave our trace, variously brutal and poetic. There are many instances here, from Sternberg, to Adrien Missika’s Botanical Frottages, to Kirsten Everberg and Matthew Chambers, whose gorgeous foliage studies evoke both joy and an autumnal melancholy (which may seem pretty joyful in the dog days of summer).
No forest offers refuge here; but as Pierre Ardouvin might put it, [t]he night is not over (2018)—which might be the universal GPS. (Two molded white resin feet peek from beneath a velvet curtain printed with a woodland scene, replete with pond and flowering trees.) We’ll all be hiding there soon enough.
The souvenirs we take from a show like this are as dark as they are sunlit—the monsters as abundant as the golden moments. Whitney Bedford’s gorgeous painting, The Time Inbetween (2015), summed up a then-now-forever moment, poised between that ‘fear of hope’ and ‘knowledge of fear.’ We’re still here for the beauty—and there’s quite a lot to be had in this beautiful show.
Talk to Me runs through August 11th at Von Lintel Gallery, 2683 La Cienega Blvd., Los Angeles 90034. Conceptual Craft II runs through August 18th at Denk Gallery, 749 E. Temple St., Los Angeles 90012. As You Like It or C’est Comme Vous Voulez runs through August 18th at Praz-Delavallade, 6150 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 90048.
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Cut Paper, Consuming Plastic; Cold Steel, Colder Flesh (1)
The weather may be catastrophically portentous in Los Angeles; but, absent a 9 or 10 Richter scale earthquake or a tsunami that drags Santa Monica out into the Pacific, the show must go on (hey this used to be Hollywood). You may or may not be going out to see and hear it, but it will be there waiting for you (until curtain, or for a few weeks anyway). Fortunately in the best instances, this can be about something more than just moving the scenery; it can be about moving the conversation. Although in theory you could do that with a book (or your screens, music, etc.) – assuming your abode is air-conditioned and you’re not camping out at a bar or cineplex – it’s more than likely at some point that you’re going to be caught out in broad, brutal daylight and away from your neighborhood, if only commuting to and from your workplace. Bearing in mind that museums are air-conditioned, you might escape the blazing sunlight and take refuge in these serene spaces – with the caveat that the conversations engendered in their galleries may carry you both physically and intellectually into slightly disturbing regions. (What’s to worry about? At least you’re not risking heatstroke.)
Wouldn’t you know that there are some must-see shows up (or about to open) in this killing heat? It’s a bit like something the artist, Frances Stark said at a press preview of her own show at the Hammer (another must-see I’ll chat about in another post): “I know there’s a lot of stuff here…. And there’s a ton more.” You could get that feeling within the space of a couple blocks on Wilshire Boulevard between Fairfax and La Brea, where two fantastic shows opened recently right across the street from each other. It almost goes without saying that one of them is at LACMA, on BCAM’s second floor. The other (bearing more than a trace of LACMA DNA) is at the Craft and Folk Art Museum, which over the last few years has come into its own as not-to-be-missed destination on the art world’s itinerary. (For those who (like myself) couldn’t get enough of Chris Francis’s exhibition of sculptural shoes, you’ll be happy to know that his couture-cobbling residency continues in the front of the museum – with fresh additions to the inventory weekly.)
What the two have in common is a specific bearing on our relations to materials in the most basic, elemental sense – our apprehension, perception, attitude and approach to them; and the way they bear on our larger view of the worlds around us – both the physical environment and culture and society. The CAFAM show (consistent with its program and emphasis) addresses that material with tactile directness and specificity. It’s organized around the work of fifteen contemporary artists who work principally (though not exclusively) with paper, not simply as two-dimensional surface or support, but as an infinitely flexible, mutable, heterodox and multi-dimensional material; to be cut, stenciled, molded, sculpted, fused or integrated with other media or materials, and blown out into self-contained installations or environments, or abstracted or reduced (as in one instance here) virtually to ashes.
Francesca Gabbiani If you’re looking for the drama in art (or design or fashion), it’s never a bad idea to start with the cut or the tear (coupure preceding couture); and that was more or less Howard Fox’s starting point in curating the show – first singling out Francesca Gabbiani and Tm Gratkowski, a powerful starting point. (Gabbiani’s chromatic genius and gorgeously wrought work have always haunted me; and I think of some of the Gratkowski works I’ve seen almost as radioactive time capsules.) As with any collision amongst radioactive particles, you soon end up with a powerful chain reaction. Moving towards a bigger bang, Fox brought in Chris Oatey and Lorenzo Hurtado Segovia; and soon enough there were fifteen, including Soo Kim, Minoru Ohira, Enrique Castrejon, Chris Natrop, Echiko Ohira, Margaret Griffith, Susan Sironi, Tam Van Tran, Lecia Dole-Recio, Rebecca Niederlander, and (finally, delightfully!) Phranc. The show’s title, Paperworks, is almost too modest, encompassing as it does the most cerebral abstraction and the most expansively environmental and surreal domains.
The sense of material heterodoxy extends to the installation itself, which ebbs and flows loosely without too many sharp turns, following the Museum’s open and strikingly corner-less floor plan. Oatey’s carbon paper clouds billow over and past Sironi’s cut (shredded and minced) paper nature morte and Castrejon’s quasi-mathematical viral clusters eddying us past (or through) Hurtado-Segovia’s double-sided ‘tapestry walls’ of woven paper, and toward an actual three-walled space where Chris Natrop’s elaborate installation of paper foliage, sound-and-light and rear video projection make a soft and surreal night jungle of the space. And that’s just one quadrant of the exhibition. I’ll have to leave further discussion of the show for another post; but credit that modesty – which in this instance really means elegance, rigor and imagination – to the fabulous Mr. Fox.
Anne Percoco, “Indra’s Cloud” (2008) In the meantime, half-way across town, at the USC Fisher Museum of Art, the signature material of the Anthropocene (and possibly its coffin nail) is the focus of Gyre: The Plastic Ocean – the continent-scale (and ever widening) disaster that plastic is creating in all the world’s oceans, but perhaps most dramatically in the south Pacific. Among the 25 artists included in this international show from Finland to Australia, are a significant number from Alaska, which may have something to do with the fact that the show was organized by the Anchorage Museum and curated by Julie Decker, its Director. Given the long-standing fierce battles to preserve the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, on-going disputes regarding North Slope drilling, the dogged attempts by BP and Royal Dutch Shell to drill in the Beaufort Sea, and ExxonMobil’s on-going campaign of public deception regarding climate change (see, the Los Angeles Times’ front-page coverage in the Sunday edition, first reported by InsideClimate News, with follow-up in both The New Yorker, and a segment of WNYC’s media-watch show, On the Media), the show could not be more timely.
The show has an archaeological feel – it could as easily be mounted in a science or natural history museum. It’s as if we’re confronting the ruins of Western civilization in both macro- and microcosm. There are works in every medium – but plastic dominates materially, not simply in terms of its relationship to the craft or medium, or even by virtue of the show’s theme, but simply because it is naturally the stuff of an artist’s everyday bricolage; it is a material everywhere at-hand. The show gives overwhelming testimony of the extent to which plastic (and petrochemicals and petroleum-derived materials) permeate our daily lives. Humans have extracted, cracked and processed the fossilized remains of the Jurassic age to create a future Jurassic that will be the last (albeit drawn-out) gasp of the Anthropocene. Painful ironies abound; but contemplating the thousands of years that will pass before some of these durable, permanent-looking materials biodegrade (and their concurrent discharge of secondary toxins in the process) sets the mind reeling.
Many of us are familiar with Edward Burtynsky’s eloquent photo-documentation of the systematic human ruination of the earth’s surfaces – represented here in a digital photograph of a Chinese recycling operation. But a number of artists bring us closer to the everyday damage of our consumer lives. Some of the most poignant works concern our impact on animal lives in the human-devastated wild, especially birds and ocean life. Susan Middleton’s photograph of a northern Hawaiian plover, starved to death because of a red plastic ring clamped to its beak is heart-rending. There are, not surprisingly, a number of works that can be categorized as ‘inventories.’ Steve McPherson is essentially a sculptor and installation artist, but his relatively small works here are touchstones in their documentation of the way materials become simple objects and instruments to be integrated into the machinery of life and culture. “28 Objects that Measured the World” (2010) consists of fragments of rulers, scales and straight-edges – all in plastic, mostly found on an English seashore.
Steve McPherson, “28 Objects That Measure the World” (2010) There’s a simplicity, almost a purity, to some of these inventory pieces that goes to the diseased heart of the human condition – the fundamental (and possibly fatal) flaw in our relationship to materials, to objects; to instrumentation and instrumentality; and finally to the physical, natural world and the culture itself. This goes to the heart of the third exhibition in this week-end’s trio of shows – but that will have to wait for the second half of this post. Trust me – it’s worth the wait.
Paperworks runs through January 3, 2016 at the Craft and Folk Art Museum, 5814 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles 90036; Gyre: The Plastic Ocean runs through November 21, 2016 at the USC Fisher Museum, 823 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles 90089