"I’VE BEEN SETTING FIRES ALL DAY"


BRETT WILSON
MICHELLE CORTEZ
SUZANNAH SINCLAIR
“I’VE BEEN SETTING FIRES ALL DAY”
May 25 – July 8, 2007

Opening Reception with the Artists Friday, May 25, 6-9 p.m.

“I’ve Been Setting Fires All Day” shows the work of 3 artists with an intrinsic sensibility that is both vulnerable and sophisticated.

Brett Wilson does what few others dare to do when he takes the craft of painting at face value, making naive oil paintings that use a sharp wit to convey meaning. In “Let’s Do Some Living After We Die” his deceased dog Gilligan is portrayed enjoying himself in the afterlife in a field of raw and beautifully rendered flowers. His self-portrait “Feelin’ Fine” is a depiction of a trip to the afterlife to visit “Gilly”, showing just the top of Wilson’s head peeking up in that same field of flowers. Since life is so fragile it should be taken with the best of humor, Wilson reminds us.

Michelle Cortez’s watercolor and embroideries on thin white fabric resemble old bed sheets, fragile and strong. Domesticity comes to mind as it usually does with sewn works, but in this case she has taken it on the road. These works were all made before, during and after a 6 month bus trip through South America. In Cortez’s simultaneously meticulous and haphazard work you can feel the sweat of her labors and the issues she may have been struggling with along the way. There is a distinct sense that she was working something out by creating these highly personal works.

Suzannah Sinclair paints seductive portraits of young females in different states of repose. Whether in bed, laying in the grass or in other intimate settings, her subjects are always stripped down to their bare elements. Often inspired by 1970’s era Playboy imagery, her muses are mischievous and knowing with a pure innocence and clarity which it seems Sinclair wishes to preserve in her paintings. Often referred to as sad and lonesome, her paintings also show a confident power in their solitude which is presented by Sinclair to us, the audience and voyeur. Created with thin layers of translucent watercolor on birch panel, Sinclair uses the natural wood grain as part of the composition which furthers the sensual quality of her work.

  • Galleri Loyal
  • Ben Nason/Pilaiporn Pethrith


    Ben Nason
    Spare
    24. maj – 30. juni 2007

    Ben Nason: Untitled 1 from the series “Spare”, 2006, archival ink jet print, 126 x 84 cm.


    Pilaiporn Pethrith
    SOS#4 (Series of Situations)
    24. maj – 30. juni 2007

    Pilaiporn Pethrith: Untitled, 2006, print på lærred, 120 x 80 cm.

  • MAP Projects
  • Gert Robijns


    Gert Robijns Olympics

    In his works Gert Robijns focuses our attention on simple scientific principles, forms and places. Smallest details may inspire him to his philosophical and poetic contemplations. For example that a blink causes reality to shift to the left or to the right, that images take shape in our brain.

    His exhibition Olympics emanates from a similar idea, it developed from reflections on the shape of a circle. Found material is sawed into smaller and larger elements generating positive and negative outlines of a circle. The modest composed cuttings evolve in space to images of a wide range of meanings.

    The sculptural installation is completed with a sliding door, which opens and closes in irregular intervals. The structured framework is leaning casually against a wall, leaving only the space behind it open for view. Simultaneously to the rhythmic opening of the structure a bright light switches on in an adjacent part of the exhibition space.

    Connotations to gateways, crowds of people, the flurry of camera flashes, and spotlights are in a striking contrast to the quite order of the rest of the installation. The critic Wim Peeters aptly characterizes Gert Robijns approach as being marked „by indication, rather than designation or interpretation.

    Herzliche Grüße / best wishes Julia Sökeland, Nasim Weiler

  • Art Agents
  • www.artagents.de

    DUNK! / FORMEL 1




    DUNK! / FORMEL 1

    DUNK! is proud to present new paintings by the upcoming Danish painters Rasmus Lütken and Jakob Rød

    Rasmus Lütken is a profound fabulous surrealistic formalistic humorist who keeps a perfect balance between colors and form in some marvelous far-out cartoon like paintings in which every-day-life walks dreamlike on the edge of the abyss.

    Jakob Rød is a super conceptual painter who by simple moves creates some of the coolest and breathtaking beautiful paintings on the art scene right now in a style where
    Pop is confronted with the purest form of zen.

    Opening Reception:

    Thursday, may 24, 2007 from 6:00 p.m. –10:00 p.m.

    The exhibition is open from Friday, May 25, until Sunday, June 24, by appointment or
    every Thursday from 10: a.m. – 3:00 p.m.

    DUNK!
    Værkstedsvej 6, 2. sal tv.
    2500 Valby / København.

  • Dunk Dunk
  • Zadok Ben David


    Zadok Ben David
    Black Field

    Black Field, 2007, painted steel, size variable

    Exhibition dates: 1st June – 7th July 2007

    Hales Gallery is pleased to present Israeli sculptor Zadok Ben David’s first solo show at the gallery.

    Ben David is best known for his work using slights of hand and eye, emerging from his obsession with magic tricks. In 1988 he represented Israel at the Venice Biennale, which was the culmination of this early period of single works.

    Since this time, Ben David has enjoyed considerable success with his large scale installations; his major work, Evolution and Theory, 1998, has been exhibited at the Museum Beelden aan Zee, Scheveningen, in the Netherlands and the San Francisco Art Institute. This work initiated Ben David’s exploration into the paradoxical position of western scientific discovery which has continued to form a central theme within his practice.

    This new work Black Field continues to investigate Ben David’s interest in visual trickery and illusion in relation to a fascination with science as a vehicle for progress. A major installation, it completely permeates the left hand side of the gallery allowing the spectator only one vantage point from which to view this spectacular work. Both witty and playful, the piece seduces its audience by creating a deception, easy to unravel but magnificent in its simplicity.

    The installation consists of over 3000 acid etched stainless steel miniatures, cut to resemble illustrations from 18th and 19th century herbal and botanical manuals which Ben David has collected and chosen specifically for this project. Each flowering plant has been given a unified size, painted black and placed upright. Viewed individually, the pieces appear to be both a shadow, and a shadow of a shadow, superimposed against an immaculate white ground. Yet, seen as a whole, as the title indicates, the installation emerges as a ghostly horizon, metaphorically suggesting a burial field, ravaged by plague, pestilence or war.

    Zadok Ben David moved to Britain in the 1970s and studied sculpture at St Martin’s School of Art under the tutorage of Anthony Caro, William Tucker and Phillip King. His work first came to prominence as part of the New British Sculpture movement in the early 1980s which reacted against much of the minimal and conceptual art of the 1960s and 1970s.

    Most recently, Ben David has produced a solo survey show at Guangdong Museum of Art in Guangzhou, China and has completed a series of major outdoor sculptural works including those at the Yad Vashem, Israel and Goodwood Sculpture Park.

  • Hales Gallery
  • CINDY SHERMAN


    CINDY SHERMAN
    A Play of Selves
    May 23 – June 15, 2007
    Opening: Wednesday, May 23, 6-8pm

    “A Play of Selves / Act 2-Scene 2”, 1975
    black and white photograph mounted on board
    45 x 38.1 cm
    © Cindy Sherman

    Monika Sprüth and Philomene Magers are delighted to exhibit ‘A Play of Selves,’ Cindy Sherman’s seminal work from 1975 at their Grafton Street gallery in London.

    In the introduction to the recently published catalogue for ‘A Play of Selves’ (Hatje Cantz, 2007), Sherman states: “This is the only work I’ve ever done that was consciously autobiographical.”

    American photographer and film-maker Cindy Sherman, born 1954 in New Jersey is known for her conceptual self-portraits in which she fully transforms herself into different personas with the use of make-up, costumes, play acting and even prosthesis. Sherman’s work questions visual representation by addressing the false naturalness of photography, in particular the images of women which are promoted by mass culture such as movies, television and magazines as reality. Some of her most important series of works include “Untitled Film Stills” (1977-1980), “Centerfolds” (1982), “Disasters” (1986-1989), “History Portraits/Old Masters” (1988-1990) “Sex Pictures” (1992), and “Clowns” (2003-2004).

    ‘A Play of Selves’ comprises 72 photographic assemblages which Cindy Sherman cut out of black and white prints in 1975 during her last college year in Buffalo, New York, and marks one of the first uses of herself as a subject in staged photographs. Having originally used the cut-out figures for an animated film (‘Doll Clothes,’ 1976) she soon realized that the figures could interact with each other. A film script developed, the story of a young woman overwhelmed by various alter-egos working at odds with her and her final conquering of self-doubt, played out in four acts and a finale with 16 separate characters. The scenes incorporate the allegoric figures ‘Madness,’ ‘Vanity,’ ‘Agony’ and ‘Desire’ that evoke the conflicting aspects of the female protagonist, which appears in different situations as ‘Broken Woman,’ ‘The Actual Main Character’ and ‘The Character as Others see Her.’ Only at the end does ‘Broken Women’ become the ‘Actual Main Character.’

    Cindy Sherman lives and works in New York City. Since the 1980’s, her work has been collected by major private and institutional collections worldwide. Most recently, a large-scale retrospective organized by the Jeu de Paume, Paris travelled to Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria and is currently on view at the Louisiana Museum for Moderne Kunst, Denmark until May 20, concluding at Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, Germany (15 June – 17 September 2007).

    ‘A Play of Selves’ will be on view at Monika Sprüth Philomene Magers, 7A Grafton Street, from May 23, 2007 through June 15, 2007. Opening Hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm and by appointment.

  • Sprueth Magers
  • Rene Schmidt


    A manifold is an abstract mathematical space in which every point has a neighborhood which resembles Euclidean space, but in which the global structure may be more complicated.

  • Helene Nyborg