Marcel Dzama

Marcel-Dzama

Marcel Dzama (1974, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada) presents his second solo exhibition in Spain, and first in Galería Helga de Alvear. His drawings, endowed with a unique and personal imagery, have become extremely popular in the past few years.

Marcel Dzama’s world is rooted in the history of traditional illustration, with visual references which refer us to the classics from the decades of the 20’s and 30’s of the last century. Nevertheless, it is as if the artist were presenting us with a perverse version of these. He has created a personal, perfectly identifiable iconography, with recurring characters who perform rather difficult to discern actions, creating an atmosphere, an aura, full of humour, irony, anxiety and absurdity.

These are hybrid characters, personified animals, animate objects. Their actions are sustained on the limits of narrative, prompting the spectator to find a meaning, a linearity, which doesn’t lead anywhere but which keeps the spectator guessing. It is as if we had access to a unique, not decisive moment, not knowing what happened before or what comes after.

The works are realised in pencil, ink and watercolours with a restricted palette: there is a dominance of red, brown, green, khaki, grey and black. The paper background is always left white, emphasising that reference to traditional illustration and, occasionally, the artist adds a text, either a line as a title or filling up the whole page.

He has produced a project specifically for this exhibition, in which he has given vent to Spanish motives. Almost as in a circus parade in which we see Don Quixote, bulls and bullfighters, flamenco dancers and a new character in his world; perverse, dressed in polka dots, and sexually ambiguous, these figures along with details borrowed from Goya’s drawings and quotes from Federico García Lorca and from the Aragonese painter himself.

Regarding The Dance of Delilah, the artist says: “I had recently embarked on the task of collecting the images piled up around me, and Delilah wasn’t something I was expecting to do. It emerged from the concern with the meaning of existence, and, above all, the death of the anonymous masses. Thus, Delilah dances with uncertainty and plays with language, as if she really cared about one language or another. Beyond that, the rules are random, and nothing is familiar or usual, although they do join the rhyme and richness of the harmonies and the suggestions of the imagery. So, please, enjoy the dance.”

Along with the series of drawings, the artist also presents the video “The Infidels”, in which two armies, a male and a female one, face each other in a battlefield, mixing choreography and details of great violence.

Galeria Helga de Alvear

Cornelius Quabeck

Quab3

Stephen Friedman Gallery is pleased to present ‘Short Straw’, a body of new work by German painter, Cornelius Quabeck.  This is the artist’s second solo exhibition at the gallery.

Quabeck combines process-led, intuitive painting with figurative compositions.  His previous works have portrayed rock stars and fictional characters in energetic portraits that relay the artist’s painterly skill.  In this vibrant new body of work Quabeck shifts the focus of his attention to the natural world, partly inspired by a recent residency in Marin County, California.

Neither abstract nor wholly figurative in style, these works combine explosive tonal planes with fractured depictions of flora and fauna. Overlapping layers of paint bleed into one another and saturate the surface of the canvas.  A kaleidoscopic fusion of colour and tone ensues.  From the depths of this chaotic mixture of turquoise blues and ocean-like greens, reds and yellows, the faint markings of tangible forms appear.  Fragmented brush strokes suggest the outline of a fruit tree, the impression of a paintbrush, or the hint of a wild beast.

These fractured forms resonate in the foreground of the paintings.  Beneath them remain the faint traces of older marks that have since been worked over.  This process reveals a palimpsest; the foreground, background and layers in between manifest themselves simultaneously.  Readily discernible in certain works is the motif of a Dodo’s head.  Rising out of the paintings’ colourful midst, the portrait of this emblematic bird interrupts the figure-ground relationship, where extinction and reinvention coalesce.

Cornelius Quabeck (b. 1974, Germany) lives and works in Düsseldorf, Germany and has exhibited widely in Europe. Recent solo exhibitions include: C Monster, Taro Nasu, Tokyo (2009); Workout!, Martin van Zomeren, Amsterdam (2008); Capital C, Galerie Christian Nagel, Berlin (2008) and Critical Mess, Friedrich Petzel Gallery, New York (2008). Recent group shows include: Malen ist Wahlen 1981-2009, Galerie Christian Nagel, Berlin (2009); Any kind of cruelty, Martin van Zomeren, Amsterdam (2009) and Self Portraits, James Fuentes, New York (2008).

Stephen Friedman Gallery

Barry McGee

Seen on the street in Miami::: (Pretty nasty)

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