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

art reviews

 

 

Jean-Michel Fouquet
Haim Chanin Fine Arts
>>
By Joel Simpson

Die Young, Stay Pretty
Diana Lowenstein Fine Arts >>

By Aimee Sinclair

All You Desire
P.P.O.W. Gallery >>

By Mary Hrbacek

 

              


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Jean-Michel Fouquet
Haim Chanin Fine Arts

By Joel Simpson

 

The ancient Greek word, Kaïros, is variously translated as the “right or opportune moment,” “right time or season,” “opportunity.” That Fouquet chose to title this exhibition of photographs Kaïros seems somewhat incongruous. The apparent subject matter of his images consists of objects of indeterminate use, seemingly rescued from miscellaneous storage in dingy, neglected spaces. They evoke the detritus of abandoned warehouses before the glass is swept up. What is opportune about this? As poetry, however, this work invites the viewer to force implied meaning through a keyhole of paradox, to discover a new truth that the artist is aiming at.

The subjects: a short solid cylinder surmounted by a smaller diameter cylinder that is hollow inside (Chien noir3 [Black Dog 3]); two rounded coffin-like structures (conga drum cases?) with metal bands around them and perhaps a lock hasp, against an indifferently painted wall, with thin black strings wrapped loosely around them (Chien noir 2); a football shaped object (but is it flat?) suspended from a board by black strings, some loose, some taught (Chien noir 1); very narrow stairways in a closed-off room ending at a blank wall but with spot illumination (Kaïros 6, 7 & 8); a figure (?) seen from behind, dressed in a cloak that reveals no limbs, standing in front of a wretched garden and a space covered in arcing pencil strokes (Kairos 1-5); what look like two rigid halter dresses standing by themselves, straps in the air (Ordalie 1 [Ordeal in the archaic judicial sense, suggesting a torture device]).

Fouquet’s confected proto-photographs evoke artifacts of an earlier culture, mechanized, but much simpler, just a generation or two old, resting undisturbed for years. Of course, Fouquet has made them himself. And he employs a technique of overpainting that mostly obscures their naïve cardboard-glue-and string constitutions. But he has turned this necessity into a virtue: by playing on the ambiguities of medium (are they photographs or drawings?), time (how long ago were they created?), and scale (how big are they?), he forces us to look at them as purely visual objects within the context of a tangibly musty atmosphere. We can’t identify them: Fouquet plays on their enigmatic nature, giving us tantalizing titles that hint at possible metaphors or symbols. Are they even photographs?

The power of these images is that they defy concept, yet they are so constructed in their composition as to transfix the eye, with their highly modulated geometry. Yes, the underlying geometrical simplicity makes it easy to take them in, while the heavily layered atmosphere rewards with textural nuance.

But what about theme? What is Fouquet getting at with these images? Considered in the context of our own image-saturated culture, these pictures fall at opposite end of the axis: His fictional apparatuses of archaic Ordeals may twit us with a dose of irony for our willingness to subject ourselves to the ordeals of maintaining our computers, printers, cell phones, and other devices that we have become so thoroughly dependent on. We gaze on these anti-glossy, anti-glamourous images with longing, allowing them to cleanse our overstimulated frenetic souls, that have already scarred up in defense against the urgent marketing of our commercial culture. Their purity, obscurity and ambiguity offer relief from the mind-numbing obviousness of the appeals that shower us constantly. They seem to have some power to anchor our sanity.

 


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Die Young, Stay Pretty
Diana Lowenstein Fine Arts

By Aimee Sinclair

 

In this Miami based summer group show dubbed Young Generation 3: Die Young, Stay Pretty, curator Jose Carlos Diaz assembles a group of work centered around the theme of “youth.” Inspired by the classic 1970s film Logan’s Run in which a youth-obsessed society decrees that people over the age of 30 must turn themselves in for expiration, Diaz’s apparent intention was to offer some light tongue-in-cheek summer fare.

But the show manages to strike a deeper chord by referencing youth. Miami especially, can be worked into this allegorical equation as a young art city. As such, the Logan’s Run theme can be similarly applied to the production of art and the shaping of artistic careers in Miami’s art scene. The youth factor is often linked to a few salient Miami art dealers who are closely connected to the New World School of the Arts and have ties to local museums. The New World School consists of both a high school and a college, hence the young ages of the alumni. Often the perception about town is that these dealers are responsible for directing and shaping the careers of young artists from the “inside” while they are still in school. Many in the local arts community view this relationship as paternalistic vis-à-vis the “manufacturing” of art careers. Simultaneously, due to their youth (many artists are in their early-twenties), they are subject to falling prey to the one hit wonder artist syndrome in which, by their mid-twenties, they struggle to break out of the mold they are known for. This has in fact resulted in what some view as a lack of growth in the work of some of the most notable Miami art scenesters.

Hence the work in this show explores the notion of having an art career both before and beyond one’s prime; the notion of one’s prime or optimum period is of course contestable and purely subjective. Miami’s duality, both as a tropical harbinger of natural beauty and one of plastic excess, produces something of an alternative reality.

The mixed media works here do not allow for typecasting. Rather, they are compelling in the sense that they aspire to incorporate time or the brevity of one’s presence in a particular space. Yet the show doesn’t suspend time; the essence of time is seen, felt and heard.

Each artist manifests this distinctly. In the work of Michael Scoggins there is a foreboding sense of gloom embedded within the doodling of a Marvel comics character obsession. Erica Magrey’s video, Favorite Song: Sam, brings the boredom of youth to the fore as a young girl dances to an extremely arduous techno beat. Both Scoggins and Magrey reach back in time, drawing on themes of early childhood. Sculpture pieces by Felice Grodin and Luis M. Alonzo-Barkigia embody a ruin and a remnant. Grodin’s piece, titled Blood Meridian suggests an anthropomorphic slaughter of sorts that grows out of the wall of a building ruin and encroaches upon the space. It is simultaneously tragic and funny. Alonzo-Barkigia’s piece, Plymouth, seems a comical remnant of the 1990s youth, in which layers of punk music posters and urban graffiti have been ripped from a building. Vicenta Casan’s photographs hover somewhere in the middle, a mobius strip of motion photography between a father and son. Lastly, the large-scale drawing of a skull by Manny Prieres offers a relic, albeit just the bones, aptly titled, Left behind.

The artists in this show give lie to the picture postcard view of Miami as an idealized landscape, by offering up a mixed bag of incongruity. These time portraits, if you will, succeed in escaping causality. An acute awareness of mortality pervades much of this work. Die Young, Stay Pretty, like the lyrics it was inspired by, “Are you waiting for the reaper to arrive? Or just to die by the hand of love? Love for youth, love your youth.” attaches meaning to an otherwise blasé snapshot of Miami’s fledgling art scene and environs; a place in which aesthetics both natural and man-made are triumphantly co-dependent.

 


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All You Desire
P.P.O.W. Gallery

By Mary Hrbacek

 

Curated by Jason Murison, this abstract group show, All You Desire, epitomizes the appeal of flash that resonates with universal power from the “animal kingdom” to humans. These works focus unabashedly on shallow surface glitz and glamour, but this is the beginning, not the end of the narrative. Beneath the squirm, flash, beads, lights, and baubles, lies the genesis of form, the source from which life gets the go-ahead signal to recreate. While many of the works do not coagulate into clearly organized structures, this display of inchoate objects allows the viewer to engage them on a pre-cognitive level.

The curator’s premise that new uses for design-based materials are an “affectation” of artists, who are influenced by a presumed consumer culture’s unrelenting marketing techniques, makes a point that overlooks the genesis of creativity, a colliding conflagration of inspiration and cultural influences.

What seems to matter here is that these industrial design materials are transformed into the realm of art that transcends function.

Prudencio Irazabal’s striped painting, Untitled, 2003, is mottled with shadows and is soft around the edges cum Mark Rothko. Noah Sheldon’s Wall Section with Lights, 2007, displays colored fluorescent lights peeping through a pastel pegboard, hardly a utilitarian item. Laura Ribol’s Sinister/Dislocator, 2005, a single channel video with sound, records an indeterminate squirming black rubber form on a flat bright pink ground, whose motions recall modern dance movements. In the sculptural floor piece, Gold Litany, Litany Foiled, 2007, Anna Betbeze juxtaposes faux gold balls with fake fur and marbles, in an eye-catching artificial nest-like array. Alyson Shotz’s hanging piece, Small Universe, 2007, features glass beads, lenses, wire, and other plastic media in a glitzy linear, science oriented abstraction. Liam Gillick’s super-ethereal floor piece, Dispersed Discussion Structure, 2006, suggests a new use for whiskey by mixing it with glitter and sprinkling it onto the floor of the gallery. Exclusive Lighting, 2007, a digital video by Anne Eastman, catalogues a dizzying array of garish Italian chandeliers viewed up-close and at a distance in a lighting store in New York’s Little Italy.

This exhibition presents, if you will, an updated look at an L.A. abstract art movement of the 1960’s, “Fetish Finish,” in which brightly colored industrial materials, combined with simple hard-edged forms, mirrored the flashy surface appeal of popular objects, from cars to surfboards. These works in All You Desire offer a softer, more reticent vision that brings a functional object, such as a pegboard or a minimal striped painting on canvas, into that indefinable realm of poetic lyricism.

 

 

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