Michael Smith at the Metropolitan Museum, New York


As part of the exhibition Pictures Generation at the Metropolitan Museum, New York, artist Michael Smith (assisted by Carol Smith Mitchell and Cameron A. Larsen) will perform Minimal Message Movement alongside performances by Paul McMahon.

Comedy and humour were vital to the group of artists featured in the exhibition. This event brings together two of the great artist-performers of the period, Michael Smith and Paul McMahon. Smith reprises an early piece from the 1970s entitled “Minimal Message Movement” and stages a birthday party for Baby Ikki, the perpetually 18-month-old character (played by Smith) who is an archetype with an unclear mission. McMahon performs a selection of his acerbic songs lampooning the 1980s art world and also appears as the Rock ‘n’ Roll Psychiatrist, providing on-the-spot musical responses to personal problems posed by the audience. Please note: contains adult content

Metropolitan Museum
Hales Galley

HUMAN NATURE


HUMAN >< NATURE Summer Exhibition '09
Groupshow by the gallery artists and guests
This summer Charlotte Fogh Contemporary proudly presents twelve promising artists:
Anne Torpe > < Søren Behncke > < Christina Malbek > < HuskMitNavn > < Sofie Hesselholdt og Vibeke Mejlvang > < Jacob Tækker > < Birgitte Storm > < Zven Balslev > < Ida Kvetny > < Katja Bjørn > < Louise Sparre Inspired by the title HUMAN >< NATURE, the artists have created new works in media ranging from video, sculpture and collage to painting, drawing and photo art. Though, very different in their expression, all the works relate to that basic human condition, we call “Human Nature”. In other words they visualize our deepest darkest desires, urges, fears, doubts, weaknesses and strengths...everything that makes life worth while! With a great deal of irony and reflection, the artists comment on the human existence in its totality, for better or for worse.
Charlotte Fogh

ALEX HUBBARD: "SPACED YOURSELF"


ALEX HUBBARD: “SPACED YOURSELF”

STANDARD (OSLO) is pleased to announce its first exhibition with New York-based artist Alex Hubbard, presenting a new video work along with four new paintings. Entitled “Spaced Yourself”, the exhibition is partly taking Walter Benjamin’s discussion of architecture in Franz Kafka’s writing as a point of departure. Hubbard takes an interest in how the experience of architecture allows for a refusal of closure between what we know and what we imagine or feel – the modern and the ancient.

I am standing on the threshold about to enter a room. It is a complicated business. In the first place I must shove against an atmosphere pressing with a force of fourteen pounds on every square inch of my body. I must make sure of landing on a plank traveling at twenty miles a second around the sun – a fraction of a second too early or too late, the plank would be miles away.
– Sir Arthur Eddington: The Nature of the Physical World, 1928

At the centre of the exhibition is the video work, Screens for Recalling the Blackout, recorded earlier this year in a sizeable Brooklyn studio. Hubbard has created a changing space followed by the camera, but purposefully has the camera being a step behind. The action is just missed; walls shift, bricks fall, temporary walls are erected, and Plexiglas panels move in front of the camera. The circular movement of the camera dolly continually updates, obscures and eventually looses the room. Benjamin employs the term “vertigo machine” in his discussion of Kafka’s architecture. Equally aiming at disorientation, Hubbard’s video establishes a strange relationship between what is being seen and what is being made. Causality becomes unclear: it sometimes appears as if the camera is determining the action. Memory becomes equally unclear: there is just enough repeat of the space to start to know where you are, but as the camera is slow the space is changed and the old tableaux forgotten by the time you return there. It’s closest to how new buildings replace old ones in the city. You know something else used to be there, but unless you knew it personally you can’t remember what it was.

Comparable to the cut-up of his video works, the dynamics of Hubbard’s paintings seem to rely on a juxtaposition of fragments forming a non-modular repetition. Neither negative nor affirmative, the untitled paintings here on display apply the same method of production. Rather than starting from zero, Hubbard establishes a matrix that then allows for addition or reduction. At the foundation of all works is a silk screen print rendering the crumpled surface of a sheet of paper. The spatial illusion of this transfer is, however, immediately interrupted by occasional drips and brushstrokes of thick, solid colour. This layering of opposites may be reminiscent of the table tops from so many of his earlier video works, but is more specifically conditioned by an interest in the opposition between fictive depth (‘optical’) and factual depth (‘thickness’) in painting and how this will allow for a collapse of the relationship between fore- and background. It also exposes a greater concern with Hubbard’s production: the aim at constructing an index or the appearance of empirical research, while also clearly exposing his aim at tension through the construction of a structure of oppositions. The difference in repetition: the painstaking multiplication of the silk screen prints – separated by various hues of blue and light grey – that neither results in any progression nor exact duplication. The appearance of spontaneity: the insistence on instance while willingly bringing any notions of gesture, force and movement to a dead halt.

Alex Hubbard received his education from Pacific Northwest College of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program. Recent exhibitions include a solo presentation at Art Basel Miami Beach, under the auspices of STANDARD (OSLO), Contemporary Art Museum St Louis (together with Oscar Tuazon); Greene Naftali Gallery, New York; Johann König, Berlin; Palais de Tokyo, Paris; Castillo / Corrales, Paris; Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, New York; and the Whitney Museum of American Art at Altria, New York. Throughout the course of the exhibition his works can also be seen in a solo exhibition at Gallery C / Team Gallery in New York as well as the group exhibition “Nothingness and Being” at Jumex Collection in Mexico City.

Standard

Banks Violette


Banks Violette

Team is pleased to present an exhibition of new drawings, alongside one sculpture, by the New York-based Banks Violette. The exhibition will run from the 7th of May through the 20th of June 2009. Team Gallery is located at 83 Grand Street, between Wooster and Greene, on the ground floor.

Sculptor Banks Violette has always referred to his drawings as “film cells from the world’s slowest movie.” As with the cinema, meaning does not adhere solely to individual images but rather to their accretion over time. Viewed singly, these exquisitely rendered pictures seem miraculous transfigurations of realism, but when seen in groups they form a continuous landscape of memory, regret and melancholy.

The iconography on which Violette built this show includes the ace of spades, a grinning skull from a B-movie campaign, a famous Vietnam-era image of human suffering, a roadside death shrine, discarded party balloons, a theater spotlight, and the Crimson Ghost from the 1940s Republic film serial. When taken together, the drawings touch on themes of redemption and faith, death and transformation.

Central to the exhibition is a portrait of Bela Lugosi as Jesus Christ. Before coming to the U.S. to make his name as the cinema’s most famous vampire, the Hungarian actor made his living playing the lead in passion plays. Violette’s Dracula/Christ manages to take the perceived goodness and suffering of the Jesus figure and “confuse” them with the monstrous evil that Lugosi would so successfully embody as the Count. Lugosi’s well-documented drug addiction and late-period decline into poverty and obscurity are also clearly a part of what attracts Violette to this image. A seemingly benign religious portrait, in Violette’s hands, becomes a container for Hollywood’s lies, America’s morbid fascination with disposable celebrity, and our constant need to construct mythologies of total success and absolute failure.

Violette’s drawings are also, at their very core, terribly American works of art, a fact foregrounded here by an eight by four foot drawing of the U.S. flag rendered in black and white and mounted onto a slab of aluminum which is then simply propped against the wall. This monolith helps underline the physicality of Violette’s drawings – images struggle to the surface from a dense mass of graphite applied sometimes laboriously and vigorously; sometimes with a gentle and persuasive sensitivity.

The show’s lone sculpture is a motorcycle that has been cast entirely in resin and salt. The stark white presence will be paired with a drawing of a shrine left at a scene where someone had died in a motorcycle crash. The way in which the image has been rendered makes the drawing seem to appear and disappear as one looks at it. A very strange sense pervades that you are both looking at something specific and looking at nothing at all.

Violette’s drawings are always coming together and falling apart in the eye of the spectator. Soft edges, hardened into image through cognition, vanish into nothingness and slip from legibility. Violette’s work, sometimes crushingly monumental and brutally hard-edged, always so present, is actually, delicately, about the “after” of things. It is not the photo-realistic clarity of the drawings that gives them their power but rather the way in which they remain vague and unreal impressions with a ghost-like presence.

The commemorative and the evidentiary, posed as poetry and prose, have remained central in Violette’s work. The contradictory and the elusive are the continent of his travels. If one looks for the development in Violette’s work one finds a movement towards abstraction: from his earlier works, which sprang from specific social, usually criminal, phenomenon to his most recent investigations of staging and the spectacular as vessels of oblivion.

Violette has been exhibiting his work for the past ten years. This is his fifth solo show at Team. His work has been shown at, and collected by, major museums around the world, and he has been the subject of numerous articles. Recent solos include the Kunsthalle in Vienna; the Modern Art Museum in Forth Worth, Texas; the Kunsthalle in Bergen, Norway; and the Whitney Museum of American Art. He’s also participated in group shows at The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; the Migros Museum fur Gegenwartskunst; the Andy Warhol Museum; the Museum of Modern Art; the Frankfurter Kunstverein; the Palais de Tokyo; the Royal Academy; the Kunstmuseum St. Gallen; PS1; the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, among others.

Team Gallery