"Continuity Inbetween"

Jeppe Hein Opening in TokYo tomorrow….

“Continuity Inbetween” 2007.1.19(Fri) – 3.3(Sat)

Jeppe Hein was born in Denmark in 1974, and works from bases in Berlin and Copenhagen. For the past several years he has exhibited at art museums and galleries around the world, and has been in constant demand for international art exhibitions. Still an upcoming artist, the art world is keenly watching how his work develops.

Jeppe Hein’s works are humorous, drawing observers into newly-created physical and psychological experiences. In 2003 he created a labyrinth from water jets at the Venice Biennale, with sensors that raised walls of water in response to the movement of someone entering, trapping them inside. This large work attracted the most attention of any of the art at the Biennale. Another work is a large room with nothing in it. Visitors wear headsets that monitor the wearer’s movement and vibrate unpleasantly when they detect movement in particular directions, thereby creating the walls of an invisible maze. Other works incorporate flames, such as the flames rising from the water spray in a fountain, or benches, such as a bench with clouds of vapor that billow out when someone sits down, enveloping the sitter.

Hein’s works undercut perceptual and cognitive logic, amusing us through stimulating tricks or mechanisms that take us by surprise. Hein frequently uses sensors to detect how people move, utilizing that movement to change the behavior of the work in unpredictable ways. Visitors attempt to actively influence the work’s behavior, but they find themselves having to accept that it cannot be completely controlled. That irrationality is part of what is amusing.

With his rich sense of playfulness, Hein makes just little changes to the ‘normal’ form and function of a space/object/phenomenon, or to its interrelationship with observers, but in doing so he opens up a whole new world that the observer has not seen or experienced before, demonstrating the fragility and lack of certainty behind the order and the rules that our daily lives are dependent on. Hein’s works initially seem to be innocent purveyors of wit, but on closer examination they are much deeper; full of pleasure and joy.

Francesco Bonami, director of visual arts for the 50th Venice Biennale rated Hein’s work very highly, setting it apart from simple interactive art that draws in visitors by describing it as “a sort of mental sculpture that has both a life of its own and a life shared with the viewer. It happens sometimes that the users of Hein’s work don’t even know what the work is about, actually they don’t even realize it’s a work of art.” Bonami adds that “The power of Jeppe Hein’s art is the capacity to hide into the context where it happens to operate”

The main piece in the solo exhibition at SCAI is his architectural installation, “Continuity Inbetween,” in which two walls facing each other are joined by a line of water that jets between them. The effect is an uncanny sensation and a new experience. Hein will also be exhibiting new works in neon. This exhibition marks the start of a busy year for Jeppe Hein, with a schedule that includes exhibitions at the Tate Modern in London and the Sculpture Center in New York.

  • Scai The Bath House
  • Group show @ Galleri Loyal !





    JULES DE BALINCOURT
    BRENDAN CASS
    MISAKI KAWAI
    WES LANG
    EDDIE MARTINEZ
    “FIVE PAINTERS”
    Jan 19 – March 3, 2007

    GALLERI LOYAL OPENS AT NEW ADDRESS: TORSGATAN 53, STOCKHOLM

    Inaugural Opening Reception with the Artists: FRIDAY JANUARY 19, 6-9PM

    On January 19th, “New” Galleri Loyal proudly presents “Five Painters”, featuring work by Jules de Balincourt, Brendan Cass, Misaki Kawai, Wes Lang and Eddie Martinez.

    Since its appearance on the Stockholm art landscape in February 2005, Galleri Loyal has been actively feeding the Stockholm art scene with exhibitions from advancing, young, international artists as well as debuting newcomers from Sweden. Galleri Loyal has found a passionate and supportive public in Stockholm, who have been making their monthly openings personal, dynamic and fun.

    Now Galleri Loyal is expanding and opening a second location in a beautiful,1500 square-foot, corner space at Torsgatan 53. Formerly the flower shop Byléns – a staple of the St Eriksplan area since the 40’s, Loyal transforms this grand space in a turn-of-the-century building into a haven for international contemporary art. St Eriksplan is fast becoming the new art gallery area of Stockholm with the opening of the Bonniers Konsthall this past fall and many galleries moving to the area. “Old” Galleri Loyal will live on as a project space.

    Jules de Balincourt shows a stark reality where ideals and good intentions have in many ways been lost. In his refined and beautiful oil paintings there is a clever and clear-sighted spirit which mocks the condition of humanity. Jules, born in Paris in 1972, has become recognized as one of the important artists of his generation with exhibitions at PS 1MoMA, Whitney Biennial 2006, Saatchi Gallery, Zach Feuer Gallery and Arndt & Partner .

    Brendan Cass With his large scale paintings Brendan Cass brings us to the kind of landscape often mused upon in travel brochures. Pulsating with color, the paint application is so loose and lavish that at times it appears to have been painted with an ice cream cone. While there is a sense of fantasy and idealism, there is loneliness and isolation in Brendan Cass’s landscapes. Rarely does an artist so cleverly navigate the territory between the abstract and the figurative. Cass has had six solo exhibitions in New York, most recently at Freight and Volume in December 2006 and previously at Canada Gallery, Kenny Schachter conTEMPorary, Richard Anderson Gallery and Calvin Klein.

    Misaki Kawai achieves focused and intuitive artworks with a playful humor where her fervor for pop-culture and traditional craftsmanship come together. Born in 1978 in Osaka, Japan, and moving to New York in 2000, she has quickly become recognized for her artwork and installations at P.S.1 MoMA, Deitch Projects, Jack Hanley Gallery, Kenny Schachter, and Miami’s Moore Space. Kawai exhibited in fall 2006 at the Watarium Museum in Tokyo and her second solo show in New York opened this month at Clementine Gallery. In March she has a solo exhibition at the ICA – Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston.

    Wes Lang In his collage-like drawings and paintings Wes Lang relates a dark view of human history as well as often very personal sentiments, full of an intention to do good which often contrasts against the ultimate failure to do so. Created with a finely cultivated technique, there is at the same time a raw, wild spirit which aggressively challenges the preconceived ideas of the viewer. In addition to his work with Galleri Loyal in Sweden, Wes Lang has been exhibited widely with solo exhibitions in New York and Chicago, and group exhibitions in New York, Chicago, Boston, Athens, Paris and Tokyo.

    Eddie Martinez With a playful and unruly visual language, Eddie Martinez coaxes meaning out of everyday life with a cast of recurring big eyed characters, plants and animals. His stream-of-conscious approach to drawing has successfully developed into large scale paintings. This past year Martinez had his first solo exhibition in New York at ZieherSmith Gallery, and has received glowing reviews in publications such as Art in America and Art Review. His upcoming solo show, “Darkness” opens February 15th at Aliceday Gallery in Belgium.

  • :::::Loyal:::::
  • Joe Ovelman !


    Oliver Kamm/5BE Gallery is pleased to announce Joe Ovelman’s second solo show
    with the gallery. “For Whites Only” is an investigation into race and culture in America. Ovelman confronts racism and questions identity.

    “For Whites Only” will feature Ovelman’s largest participatory project to date.
    “Rosa Parks 381” includes 381 Polaroids of the artist, taken and signed by 381 individuals who could self-identify as African-American. The number in the title commemorates the number of days of the Montgomery Bus Boycott and is inspired by the James Baldwin quote, “I’ll be black for as long as you tell me that you are white”.

    “Regi”, 2005 is a video in which the paid subject, chosen for his African decent, stands naked and confined to one end of a room for 8 hours, the length of a typical work day. The video was shot in Porto Seguro, Brazil, a historic slave-trading port.

    Also on view: “7 Gold Lynchings,” miniature, bound figures sculpted in wire;
    “Twelve Drawings,” anecdotes of racism from the artist’s life; and a compilation CD, “Nigga in the Title,” featuring twenty-four songs whose titles include the word nigga.
    Ovelman asks, out of 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 12 months a year, when am I white?

  • :::::Oliver Kamm:::::
  • :::::Joe Ovelman:::::
  • Mario Ybarra


    Mario Ybarra Jr.’s exhibition titled, Bring me the head of… will consist of a mixed media installation including painting, sculpture, and video exploring cultural notions of martyrdom. Ybarra’s often politically charged work investigates cross-cultural Mexican-American experience and connects with broader social contexts and through the use and reinterpretation of popular culture.

  • :::::Anna Helwing:::::