
Richard Colman new show in Sweden, opens the 14 of october…
Another new work from Ulrik Schiødt

The Jancar Jones Gallery is pleased to announce a group exhibit of the work of artists Justin Beal, Lena Daly and Kate Owens.
The exhibit will represent the work of artists from different geographic regions who address both texture and form in a similar manner, while also subtly engaging and referencing popular culture. While both Owens and Beal employ readymade or industrial materials such as cling wrap, soda bottles, mirrors, etc. in their sculptural work, the subdued yet bold values which emerge share a close affinity with those in Daly’s prints of fabric, paper or reflective surfaces. There is a formalism present in all the work, which in the case of Beal can be quite architectonic while the works of Owens and Daly can abstractly iterate the qualities of water-based media. In spite of their use of the everyday, Beal, Owens, and Daly share an attentiveness to perception and how these object-based works can affect an altered presence.
Justin Beal’s work has been exhibited most recently at Small A Projects, D’Amelio Terras, and Taxter & Spengemann in New York and at Sister/Cottage Home, ACME, and Marc Selwyn Fine Art in Los Angeles. A solo exhibit of his work was shown at ACME, Los Angeles in 2008. Beal received his MFA from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles. He lives and works in Los Angeles.
A solo exhibit of Kate Owens’ work is currently on view at Dicksmith Gallery, London. Her work has also been exhibited at Showroom Gallery, London, Ingleby Gallery, Edinburgh, and at the University of Reading: Central Gallery, Reading, UK. Owens received her MA in sculpture from the Royal College of Art, London. Scottish-born, she lives and works in London.
Lena Daly’s work has been exhibited at the Federal Art Project and Five Thirty Three Gallery in Los Angeles and at Queen’s Nails Projects in San Francisco. Daly received her BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute. She lives and works in San Francisco.

Benny Dröscher
Let Us Suppose, Then, That We are Dreaming
14 Oct – 14 Nov 09
Preview 13th Oct. & Private Reception 15th Oct., both 6-9pm
S.T.O.R.A.G.E
Richard Webb
Terror Management Theory
The Agency is pleased to present new paintings and sculptures by Danish artist Benny Droscher. The new paintings are a continuation of his past dalliances with abstraction and surrealism. The works juxtapose surface and depth, the graphic and the authentic mark all within zero gravity space. Weightlessness is an important issue for the sculptor turned painter Droscher. His sculptures have the appearance of solidity when in fact they turn out to be props, holes within cloth or grooves in foam. Droscher’s canvases are physically heavier than his sculptures, yet the chromatics and arrangement of the motifs are all intended to suggest weightlessness, floating and chaos. This suggestion works despite the fact that the paintings are arranged according to the classical laws of central perspective. On first glance Droscher’s works are of ageless beauty, on second glance they become harder to read. They are composites of ciphers, part Twombly, part pastoral quotation and symbols, which possibly resonate zen practice. It is beside the point whether any of the symbols can be read how they might have been intended, as they are presented at the point of dissolution. Rather than this being a Negative, in Droscher’s work it is a Positive, the point of separation from meaning is about the liberation or the drawing of breath from being literal, literary or pictorial. The centre of the work is usually a void, which might be read as a point of transparency or a portal.
One could argue that Droscher’s paintings are inverse, rather than emanating light to the outside they suck light from within, making them radiate in turn. In order to quantify this radiation the occasional mark or squiggle functions both as a reminder of representation but also as a blockage or smear which directs the gaze.
Modernist abstraction, even expressionism would have had to decide between gravity or weightlessness, whereas todays’ abstraction can be figurative, void, decentralised and physically bound by gravity all at once. The shift in perception could be blamed on the advent of anime and 3d computergraphics or games culture. It appears that Droscher’s paintings are about an abstraction of the gaze in the age of digital representation. It allows them to propose an innocence, which is also informed by the knowledge of parallel worlds (within quantum physics) and constant paradigm shifts. Droscher’s works, be it paintings, sculptures or installations pose questions rather than provide answers, but contrary to his titles, they are not philosophical propositions but about physics versus the poetry of perception.
Benny Droscher lives and works in Denmark. He has shown extensively internationally. After his solo exhibtion at the Bergen Kunsthall, Norway last year he participated in three shows in Italy this year alone, at Blindarte Contemporanea and Mostra D’Oltremare both in Naples and the Palazzo Venezia, Rome, as well as being included in “The force of the Romanticism”, Malmö Konstmuseum, Sweden. He was profiled by Martin Herbert for the September Issue of Modern Painters 2007 as well as being commisioned to do the Manifesto for Art Review July/August 2007 and Arte Critica August 2008.












Some brand new works…

Cassi stared intently at the mirror she liked the way she looked. She likes the way she feels, she likes the state she’s in. Pammy said she likes the attention, but Pammy is a 2bit slut, least that’s what the kids called her. Even Nichole had clapped (had clap) so hard that the nails had serrated the palm flesh, oozing red in the bright lights of the camera flash. Cassi had never noticed before now, how old Nichol’s hands looked, even when garnished with raw fish and diamonds, but they all said how beautiful she was. Pammy was just jealous, how dare she ruin such a perfect life, letting it all hang out for the whole world to see, toppling around to the Cha Cha Cha on nine inch spikes. She sighed and picked up a copy of Hello. Turning the pages, her face flushed. Oh my god! That evil little bitch Clunie had scrawled all over it. Just you wait.
MOT International is delighted to welcome back Clunie Reid for her second solo exhibition at the gallery. Reid will be showing a new series of individual wall based works that push the medium and scale of her previous small photo-collages and focus the mass information of her wall based installations while retaining their raw guttural and immediate appropriation of media images. These new works successfully enlarge and focus our gaze on the reversed spectacle of contemporary society, slipping it to us in the bite-sized snippets for our mediaholic minds to devour. Pages from hello, loaded, adverts from TV, images from the internet are re-photographed and printed on reflective surfaces. Broken cameras, disruptive flash glare and printing slippage are all appropriated to enhance the work. Reid’s venomous wit is hand written over these seductive surfaces, turning the language of spectacle in on itself, negating the stupidity, transforming the dumb into great profundity. Her materials mirror her subjects, the gloss and seductive surfaces combined with the trashy use of tape, stickers and marker pen, perfectly complement the celebrities, sneaker ads and out of focus environments. Clunie Reid tells it how it is, her work cuts through a global language and it is only a matter of time before she is recognised as one of the great new chroniclers of the 21st century.
Clunie Reid (born in 1971, Pembury, Kent) lives and works in London, UK and is represented by MOT International. She was selected for East International (2007) and received the John Jones Art on Paper Award 2008 for her work at Zoo Art Fair. She has recently participated in Nought to Sixty at the ICA and had solo exhibitions at MOT International, Focal Point Gallery in Southend and Galerie Reinhard Hauff in Stuttgart. Her work has been included in a number of international exhibitions including We came here to get laid not critique dutch culture at Wilfried Lentz Gallery in Rotterdam, Aspen 11 at Neue Alte Brucke in Frankfurt, Local Operations at Serpentine Gallery in London, falkeandcharlotte project space/ Dolores at Ellen de Bruijne Gallery in Amsterdam, and This show is ribbed for her pleasure, Cynthia Broan Gallery, New York.Clunie Reid