A Kassen & Fleron


A Kassen & Fleron

It is a pleasure to invite you to the opening of two solo shows in the gallery on Friday June 13th from 6-9 pm. The artist group A Kassen exhibits in the main space and Thomas Fleron’s show ”Det fede Læskur” is in the project space. Exhibition period is June 14th – July 19th.

A Kassen work with performativ installation and sculpture. Actions, discretely part of the exhibition space, are characteristc of A Kassen’s works. The actions may even be so discrete, they don’t get noticed. But if they do get noticed, they contain strong elements of humor and surprise. Once in a while, A Kassen perform the actions themselves, but mostly they are performed by supernumeraries or even by monstrous machines, constructed by A Kassen.

A Kassen’s works refer to the objectless, conceptual art of the 60s, to performances and pop art. They examine and experiment with the borders between art and non-art, as well as self invented systems that change the functions of things within a given space. The works are absurd, subtle and often very elegant due to their seamless adaption to their context. In this sense, they form a critique of the institution and draw attention to how we act and navigate in a certain context.

The exhibition consists of a large interventive and performative work, which shall not be revealed here. A Kassen also present their new artist book, ”Damaged by Water, Financed by Insurance”.

A Kassen are Christian Bretton-Meyer (b. 1976), Morten Steen Hebsgaard (b. 1977), Søren Petersen (b. 1977) and Tommy Petersen (b. 1975). They graduated last year from the Royal Danish Art Academy and have earlier studied at Städelschule, Frankfurt. A Kassen have been selected for LISTE 08’s official performance program and have recently exhibited at Vega Basement (Copenhagen), at Brøndsalen (Frederiksberg) and Gammelgaard (Herlev, DK). They will exhibit at Overgaden (Copenhagen) in August, be part of the ”U-Turn Quadrennial” and Grafikernes Hus (both Copenhagen) in September, Kunsthallen Brandts (Odense) in October and will show solo at Brænderigården (Viborg) in the beginning of 2009.

The exhibition is supported by The Danish Art Council.

Thomas Flerion’s show ”Det fede Læskur” presents objects, drawings and a cross stitched curtain with the text ”player 8000c”. His elegant and tactile objects are reminiscences of ritual symbols from tribal ceremonies, e.g. the barked cherry tree stick with inlaid sealskin which hangs on the wall from a thread. The works are both hermetically closed and interreferential, and yet they question historical and political issues such as why a language is forgotten, a population becomes extinct, a ritual is dropped. These questions are incorporated in a mixture of acquired knowledge and personal experience.

A modern penis case, constructed as a sheath of leather with one meter long fringes and an aluminum warship on top, is hanging on the wall. Poetic inscriptions on the ship function as a contrast to the humorous sheath and the references to boys’ toys, masculine trial of strength, and war feverish display of power. The works’ decadent look and choice of material comment on cultural and historical power relations.

Thomas Fleron (b. 1972) graduated from the Royal Danish Academy of Art in 2000.

Kirkhoff

"TELL TCHAIKOVSKY THE NEWS" / CURATED BY TORBJØRN RØDLAND


“TELL TCHAIKOVSKY THE NEWS”

OLAF BREUNING, ROE ETHRIDGE, UWE HENNEKEN, MONICA MAJOLI, LUCY MCKENZIE & RICKY SWALLOW / CURATED BY TORBJØRN RØDLAND

Here is a question for Chuck Berry: Why tell Tchaikovsky the news? If you’re a black American in the 1950s and your revolution is vulgarity, why bother with Beethoven; why even address Tchaikovsky?

”Leopards break into the temple,” Kafka wrote, ”and drink to the dregs what is in the sacrificial pitchers; this is repeated over and over again; finally it can be calculated in advance and it becomes a part of the ceremony.”

Since Kafka wrote this parable, contemporary art has been both criticized and celebrated for having the characteristics of a leopard show. The celebration is an integrated part of our Romantic heritage. After Romanticism, who cares for the endless repetition of ceremonies? Bring on the events; the wildcat-burglary! Rock cemented the romantic revolution for all social classes. Testifying to the scope of his ambitions, Chuck Berry needed to tell the world that he was kicking Tchaikovsky’s pitcher.

Some artists who grew up with rock as a dominating cultural force, now see history as a mysterious hall of knocked-over pitchers or half-forgotten truths. “Tell Tchaikovsky the News” is relating everyday affective life to themes or artistic techniques from the past, while searching for a more nuanced and correct understanding of its post-rock borrowings and primitivisms.

– In sculpture, installation, video and photography, Olaf Breuning [b. 1970 in Schaffhausen, lives in New York] subverts the idea of true progress from archaic to contemporary culture.

– Roe Ethridge [b. 1969 in Miami, lives in New York] reconsiders archetypes of 20th century American photography. But motifs like The Moon are as old as the human imagination.

– The kooky figures of Uwe Henneken [b. 1974 in Paderborn, lives in Berlin] are 19th century dreamers, reanimated by a rock mentality. If they in fact represent the “Vanguards Of The Elite [V.O.T.E.]”, you might want to ask where we’re heading.

– In the watercolours of Monica Majoli [b. 1963 in Los Angeles, lives in Los Angeles], sadomasochistic hardness and gouache softness balance each other out beautifully.

– Majoli’s work is installed over a hand-painted wall-piece by Lucy McKenzie [b. 1977 in Glasgow, lives in Brussels], who looks to trompe l’oeil wood paneling and Art Nouveau for a New Art. An unsuspected love for the ex-mainstream is a sign of true individuality.

– Ricky Swallow [b. 1974 in Melbourne, lives in Los Angeles] has crafted a paradoxical bronze couple: Donatello’s undernourished Mary Magdalene side by side with California’s unrestrained ’wolfking’ John Phillips – the former leader of The Mamas & The Papas.

-Torbjørn Rødland

Standard Oslo

Mail Order Monsters


This Tuesday Andreas Melas Presents opens its doors in Athens GREECE with
a show i have curated called Mail Order Monsters.

This is the third instantiation of the theme, which started in Berlin at
Peres Projects, traveled to Deitch in New York, and continues here in
Athens.

this version features:

MAT BRINKMAN
TOMOO GOKITA
EVAN GRUZIS
BEN JONES
DAN MCCARTHY
TAYLOR MCKIMENS
EDDIE MARTINEZ
TAKESHI MURATA
AUREL SCHMIDT
FRANCINE SPIEGEL

JUNE 10 – AUGUST 15, 2008
ANDREAS MELAS PRESENTS
Epikourou 26 & Korinis 4
ATHENS, GREECE

Andreas Melas Presents announces a group exhibition curated by Kathy
Grayson exploring new trends in fucked-up figuration. Every generation
has its unique take on the figure and the freshest figurative art seems to
portray the figure as broken, decaying, uncanny, and monstrous! While the
Fractured Figure exhibition recently at the DESTE Museum explores a
prestigious array of established artists practicing in this mode, this
exhibition focuses on the younger generation of monsters bred out of our
strange and unique NOW. Each artist in this exhibition forges their
monster in a unique way:

Francine Spiegel’s soupy, sloppy women protrude from and are engulfed by
pop slime piles. Rapper’s girlfriends, socialites, and pin-up girls are
all thrown into the stew of mylar, goo, glitter, and chewing gum. Their
glammy/gory juxtaposition, coupled with the analog and digital moments of
her distortions, presents an interesting visual conundrum of seduction and
repulsion to these primordial females. In this exhibition she includes a
melancholy fetish figure slumping in a landscape of post-apocalyptic goop.

Ben Jones, a member of east-coast art collective Paper Rad, takes neon and
comic to new oddities of meaning. With the hand style of the best graffiti
artist and the conceptual, absurd rigour of a dada-ist, his paintings,
sculptures, videos and comics take a fresh look at figuration with their
subtleties of form and make you think about a face in new ways. His piece
in this exhibition, “Facemaker”, is a Mr. Potato Head scrolling spree of
morphing faces.

Tomoo Gokita favours creepily still portraits of women and wrestlers
executed exclusively in black and white. These faces occasionally escape
his brush unscathed, but more often are tangled into knots, unearthed by
abstract machine-like forms, or obliterated in one big gesture. With the
existential angst of a Bacon sous-rature but the pop-comic chicanery of a
gifted graphic artist, his portraits are more than silly; less than
tortured. His abstract work recalls Yves Tanguy in its intestinal tangle
and odd polygons.

Eddie Martinez loves men in hats, potted plants, parrots, and patterns.
Drawing with paint, and often hastily, he configures ambiguous scenes of
interaction played out equally between barely-held together figures and
the inanimate objects that decorate their interiors. In this show he
exhibits a new painting of a terrifying clown.

Taylor McKimens’ monsters are not terribly other-worldly or fantastical
but are rather the folks next door, down the street, or on the wrong side
of the tracks. Deadbeats and derelicts roam sparse, harshly lit worlds of
soggy bread and Band-Aids, bologna and knotted garden hose. The palette is
a dulled Fixin’s Bar of mustardy yellows, graying tomatoes, and limpid
greens. Taylor has a predilection for the entropic—splatters, drips,
tangles, messes and decay, rust and ruin—all the corners where disorder
begins to reclaim our fabricated environment and our bodies. No one is
smiling and everyone is somehow sweaty. In this exhibition, his two saggy
lumps come from a series he made called ‘The Drips’ who seem to trade in
poo and live where everything has many, many crotches.

Dan McCarthy focuses on form and color, texture and layer, only
incidentally, sometimes, focused on his menagerie of blue babes and
red-eyed gymnast guys. His figures are softly grounded in minimal
settings with gentle gouache-like layers, their limbs sculpturally
suffused and comically cylindrical affecting poses from classical Greece.
But then! Everyone’s pubes show through their underwear, their foreheads
are all too large, and somewhere a slosh of paint has mutated a limb or
two. Everyone has liver disease and at least a few kinds of skin
pigmentation problems. Without the breakdowns though, how could we call
the rest perfection? In this exhibition two monstrous women tantalize us
from behind the painted veil.

Takeshi Murata’s videos are seething masses of data distortion and
fractured figuration. Humans, monkeys, and monsters slog through and come
apart in a beautiful complex pattern of disrupted video. By hacking the
way a computer reads a DVD, Takeshi is able to painstakingly create frame
by frame an image of both painterly abstraction and technological
fragmentation. He has recently exhibited at Barbara Gladstone, Ratio 3,
The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and The Hirschorn Museum in DC. In
this exhibition, Takeshi exhibits his longest and most painstakingly
wrought work, Silver, and one of his new video paintings.

Aurel Schmidt builds terrifying Archimboldo babes out of the punkest junk
around. With exquisitely rendered colored pencil and graphite, her
drawings have ranged from forests of maggots and busts of tangled snakes,
to faces and figures made of spiders, cockroaches, cum and discarded
hamburger. Her spectral junk masks are sometimes haunting in a few too
many ways at once. In this exhibition are drawings from the series called
Party Monsters who seem to have caught their monstrous ugliness from a few
different types of very long nights.

Evan Gruzis is not from LA but looks like he just returned on the red-eye:
a malaise straight out of the Hollywood hills seeps into his portraits and
landscapes channeled through Ed Ruscha. With the sardonic wit of
Wayfarer-toting Brett Easton Ellis, and a unique technique of manipulating
inks to keep you guessing, Gruzis’ works stick with you like a
half-remembered name or intangible word. What you see is often only half
there, or mockingly not there at all. Three new works are included in this
exhibition, including his spectral portraits of anonymous monsters.

Mat Brinkman is a legendary underground artist with a graphic and comic
focus who is at the center of a very influential force in new artmaking
coming from Providence, RI. Though seldom exhibiting in galleries, his
works are known and loved by a generation of young people who circulate
his zines, posters and books with fervent admiration. He was a member of
epic art collective Forcefield, who was included in the 2002 Whitney
Biennial but broke up shortly after. These new ink paintings were bred
somewhere in Texas and come to us via Gallery Loyal in Stockholm. In this
rare show Mat’s molting monsters skulk about in deeply-furrowed burn suits
of gore, rage from behind fused flesh mask faces, and curl up in the
corner to stroke their horns.

Picture Boxinc

Alicia McCarthy


The Jack Hanley Gallery, San Francisco is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Oakland-based artist Alicia McCarthy.

Drawing from outsider and folk art traditions, Alicia McCarthy paints recurring motifs on found wood or panel, often weaving paint line over line to embody the interconnected moments of human interaction that together make up her identity. McCarthy’s paintings are reminiscent of abstract landscapes, composed of many lines forming grids, or arcs of color weaving on top of, and under each other, in an almost textile-like fashion. Rejecting consumer goods, McCarthy’s new works unearth and rework discarded, found objects, each of which carries its own history and tells the story of a particular place and time.

Alicia McCarthy lives and works in Oakland, CA where she was born in 1969. She received a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1994 and also attended the Skowhegan School of Painting/Sculpture, Skowhegan, ME, and the New York Studio Program, New York, NY. In 2007 she received her MFA from the University of California, Berkeley. Alicia has exhibited her work both locally and internationally and is the recipient of awards from the Headlands Center for the Arts and New Langton Arts in San Francisco, CA.
For more information or images, please contact Ashley Bellouin or Ava Jancar at: (415)522-1623, or visit our website at: www.jackhanley.com.

Jack Hanley