
Tag: 2010
Terry Rodgers

Nicola von Senger Gallery proudly presents Terry Rodgers’ 3rd solo exhibition
in Zürich, Spellbound. Rodgers (born 1947, Newark, NJ, USA) is an American
artist known for his large-scale hyper-realistic figurative paintings. He
creates scenes and a view of the world, using the words of Jean Baudrillard,
that are a “simulation of something which never really existed.”
Half-clothed, with mostly jewellery, fur and underclothing, the protagonists
of Terry Rodgers’ paintings exist in a setting of luxury. With wine and
champagne in their hands, their flawless bodies fit perfectly in the polished
environment of fine fabrics, flower bouquets and lustrous chandeliers.
Rodgers’ works never fails to elicit polarized opinion. Response ranges from
seeing it as “mere kitsch” to praising Rodgers as one of the most remarkable
exponents of today’s figurative painting. As art critic Catherine Somzé says
“Rodgers takes up clichés and flips them on their heads. What could initially
be mistaken for advertising material, on closer inspection quickly seems to be
an indictment of the so-called ‘good life’.” Looking at those meticulously
painted canvases of excessive parties, makes one veer between envy and
admiration, repulsion and excitement, and between a recognition of them as
false realities and succumbing to them as convincing illusions. In this regard
Terry Rodgers’ works are also about the viewer. Spellbindingly it draws the
viewer into participating and reveals “how we interpret and react to what we
see, and how our own lenses determine our perceptions.” (TR)
The opulent paintings, clearly related to the Old Master’s technique of the
baroque era, can be read as a kaleidoscope of Western culture’s dream-world:
The young jet-set generation celebrating the ABC’s of Living (2010),
stereotyped beauties, clones of the rich and famous, all seduced by the lure
of hedonism, promiscuity and luxury — a prescription conveyed by the media,
and incorporated by society, of what we should do and how we should interpret
the world to achieve happiness. Although The Coronation of Concupiscence
(2010) seems to visualize the wildest dreams of a large part of mankind, the
climax is over or it has never occurred. The protagonists, tired from
searching for satisfaction, are captured in a cold and anonymous atmosphere, a
whiff of vanitas in the air. Their faces, with eyes averted from each other,
speak of loneliness, of an existential void, of longing and hope.
As our vision of freedom is heavily fictional, so is the imagery of Rodgers’works. They are a construction by the artist, exemplified most obviously by
his latest body of works, a series of photo-constructions made up of many
different layers of photographs, abstract patterns and shapes, drawings and
signs. The models depicted mirror the contemporary norms of social acceptance
— young, thin, heterosexual. But Rodgers succeeds in deconstructing and
unmasking the underlying mechanics of our perception of the world. Through the
technique of the photo-constructions, he emphasizes how fragile and imperfect
the image is, creating exuberant and surrealistic compositions.
Sabine Dehnel
Sayre Gomez

Kavi Gupta Gallery Berlin is proud to present the European debut exhibition of Los Angeles based artist Sayre Gomez. Included in the exhibition is the artist’s new video Fog (2010), five small abstract paintings, three graphite drawings executed on blue Pantone paper, and a stereo covered in blue flocking playing raw recordings made outside the artist’s studio. This exhibition continues Gomez’s investigations into the ways in which meanings are contextualized and disseminated. Using the notion of self-expression as an extremely populous example of this, viewers are presented with a disparate series of objects that embrace ideological contradictions and play with one’s assumptions. The works included in the exhibition employ the use of a single color to foreground this dialogue, and to present the art object as a self-evident object, one that endures as it is balances between the unadulterated description of an artist’s interiority and the often tedious explanatory landscapes of the external world.
Sayre Gomez (b. Chicago, 1982) holds a BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2005) and a MFA from the California Institute of the Arts (2008). He will be included in the upcoming exhibition California Dreamin’ curated by Fred Hoffman as part of Arte Portugal 2010 in Lisbon, Portugal. Recent solo exhibitions include Self Expression at Fourteen 30 Contemporary in Portland, Painting at 2nd Cannons in Los Angeles, and Formal Exercise at Sandroni Rey in Los Angeles. Recent group exhibitions include Other Peoples Projects at White Columns in New York and Awful Parenthesis curated by Aram Moshayedi at Cirrus in Los Angeles. He currently lives and works in Los Angeles.
IMO Phonebox 8/12
Copenhagen Graffiti (Walls) //
The-New-World.TV

(exlusively produced for Nosoulforsale at TATE Modern May 14 thru May 16 2010 by GALERIE IM REGIERUNGSVIERTEL BERLIN)
The Green Valley is the name for a region on Mars where landing is possible.
A problem while landing on Mars has critically influenced THE-NEW-WORLD.TV`s program.
Scenes from the THE-NEW-WORLD.TV`s journey to Mars will reconstruct the development of the disaster.
The different scenes will take place in a simple stagelike set-up. (made out of wood and paper) The participating artists provide material to be used in the play or perform themselves.
A 30 minutes theatre play. A press conference. A talk show. A concert.
Participating artists:
Julieta Aranda, Tjorg Douglas Beer, Tobias Bernstrup, Marc Bijl, Matthias Bitzer, Julius Dörner, Samuel Eschmann, Jonas Fürstenau, Gregor Hildebrandt, Christian Jankowski, John Kørner, Terence Koh, Rebecca Lamarche-Vadel, April Elizabeth Lamm, Annika Larsson, Sara Lunden, Josephine Meckseper, Klaus Mettig, Olaf Metzel, Felix Riemann, Markus Selg, Esther Sibiude, Katharina Sieverding, Orson Sieverding, Pola Sieverding, Franz Stauffenberg, Costa Vece.
Resurrectine //

Udi Aloni, Elaine Angelopoulos, Eleanor Antin, Cory Arcangel, Ina Archer, Kenseth Armstead, Conrad Atkinson, Brandon Ballengeé, Guy Ben-Ner, Sanford Biggers, Chris Burden, Luca Buvoli, Nick Cave, Gordon Cheung, Sue Coe, Liz Cohen, Brody Condon, Keith Cottingham, Chris Doyle, eteam (Franziska Lamprecht & Hajoe Moderegger), Alessandra Exposito, Roy Ferdinand, Terry Fox, Yishay Garbasz, Rico Gatson, George Gittoes, Leon Golub, Brent Green, Jane Hammond, Kelly Heaton, Christine Hill, Shih-Chieh Huang, Junky Styling (Annika Sanders & Kerry
Seager), Peggy Jarrell Kaplan, Suzanne Lacy, Deborah Lawrence, Ja Rhim Lee, Ellen Levy, Jane Marsching, Jennifer & Kevin McCoy, David McDevitt, Lori Nix, David Opdyke, Pepón Osorio, Sarah H. Paulson, Frank Perrin, William Pope L, Erika Roth, Christy Rupp, Jason Salavon, Alan Scarritt, Dread Scott, Andrew Sendor, Marie Sester, Paul Shambroom, Todd Siler, Eve Sussman, Mark Tribe, Mark Wagner, Carrie Mae Weems, Hannah Wilke.
The Feldman Gallery will present Resurrectine, a large-scale group show of more than fifty artists. The selection of artworks embraces the notion of transformation – the creative act of taking form, appearance, nature, character, or meaning, and making it new again. The title of the exhibition is based on the name of the fictive elixir which restores life as imagined by Raymond Roussel in his 1914 novel Locus Solus and “rebottled” by the conceptual artist Terry Fox in 2007.
Resurrectine, the exhibition, is a guide to the always changing possibilities of language, signifying a rebirth and an expansion or narrowing of language, which in turn is linked to the visions of artists. In the spirit of the fanciful conceit of Roussel’s potion, the theme introduces new ways of thinking and the power of creativity.
As a form of time travel, the artworks incorporate contradictions: a low budget home video reenacts Moby Dick; a Medieval painting of the Resurrection becomes a video game; a flash animation combines the looting of Iraq’s antiquities with 3-Card Monte; trees inhabit libraries and museums exhibit human taxidermies; a mirror transforms
the viewer’s reflection into that of Andy Warhol; doilies are stained with menstrual blood and Audubon prints are productively vandalized. We are also engaged by the invention of nursing, fallen angels, a parent’s footsteps to a concentration camp, remembered spaces, the story of the Black film industry, escapes from death, Old Masters reborn, a Cheshire Cat, apocalypse management, a living electronic painting, reenacted famous protest
speeches, and dozens of other resurrectines.




















