At the Armory Show: John Beech at Peter Blum Gallery, New York City
In this first installation, John Beech at Peter Blum Gallery, I kept thinking "car parts" but whatever they were, the transformation of Beech's objects was sublime. The installation had these elements almost dancing on the wall. (Coincidentally, the building's capped ductwork echoes the round shapes--and you'll see that this theme of art and not-art runs through the post.)
Detail below..
I liked much of what I saw. I appreciated the crude refinement, or the refined crudeness of the work—and not surprisingly for me, the geometry of much of it. Yet walking through the fairs, I kept thinking, “Haven’t I seen this before?” In a manner of speaking, I have. In Unmonumental, an occasional series in her Newsgrist blog, Joy Garnett posts her photographs of castoff objects, often curbside trash, shot around town. In doing so she elevates the stuff to something worthy of a second look. I’ve interspersed these pics with the art. (Hint: Garnett’s pics are the smaller ones.)
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Sometimes, as with Garnett’s photographs, the castoffs are truly transcendent. El Anatsui is the master of transcendence, but there are other transformations here as well. I liked the work of Sarah Braman, who seemed to be drawing from multiple sources--Home Depot materials, Richard Prince autobody parts, and Ellsworth Kelly (if Kelly had a color sense)--but the result was startling and unique.
Armory Show: Sarah Braman at Museum 52, New York City, above and below
Armory Show: Gyan Panchal at Galerie Frank Elbaz, Paris
Armory Show: Leon Vrankow at Stella Lohaus Gallery, Antwerp
Below: a where the sculpture meets the floor
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This piece, about 30 inches high, may well be my favorite in all the shows. I loved the nicely delineated rectangle cut into the crudely stacked blocks of wood, and the slight curve of the stack in contrast to the carving. The earthy red is iron oxide, I'm guessing. And then that notch in the second block from the top becomes an almost anthropomorphic wink. What's not to love?
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Armory Show: Angela De La Cruz at Lisson Gallery, London
Painting as sculpture, detail below
Not all the stuff I saw was at the fairs. There was plenty in the galleries. I picked three shows whose work transcended its origins. We start in SoHo with Gerry Keon at OK Harris, a modest-size show in which each small work was quietly poetic. Here I think the artist reconfigured his materials, crafting them rather nicely, and put his hand to the surfaces, finishing what time had begun.
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In Chelsea at Freight & Volume, Jim Lee (who also had work in the gallery's booth at the Armory Show), seems more interested in Frankensteinian recreation, and I mean that in a good way. These objects are crude but powerful. The show is up through April 4. And in the vast space at Reeves Contemporary, Wade Kavanaugh has created a river of sheetrock bricks. Go see it! You have a week. It's up through the 21st.
Jim Lee at Freight & Volume, Chelsea, above and below
Wade Kavanaugh at Reeves Contemporary, Chelsea
The installation suggests both a river and the wall that is unable to hold it back.
Detail of the sheetrock bricks below
Unmonumental 85
7 comments:
Once again. Thank you Thank you. Great post. Living far away from the NY art scene you have become a great find for me. Love the combo of the photos with the art work.
Having been miserably mean about the previous images from the Armory show let me say how much I appreciated this, the latest posting & thankyou Joanne for offering this radically different counter-balance. I have the feeling that what we're looking at maybe the 'future' - work of a more modest scale; humble materials used with just enough of an aesthetic input to give them an edge and as Stephanie has said the photos key them off nicely. All in all a good way to start a Sunday.
Joanne, this is the best post using the unmonumental images ever! really, I love the correlations.
thanks again,
joy
That's so funny! I follow Joy's blog so seeing these images with the art is perfect.
Wonderful post! I loved the side-by-side images you put of Joy Garnett's and the other artists' artwork. Despite those snickers you heard, I'm very glad you took pictures around the Frank Elbaz booth!
There's this new website that just launched called www.mysoiree.net that may be of interest to you. It's a site where artists have virtual studio space to display their work. There's a lot of up-and-coming artists on there, and I thought you may be interested in taking a look.
Once again, thanks for a great post!
Effin' brilliant post. Is Joy a genius or are the others just lame? hmmmmmm
The armory show, art fairs, museums, all of these institutions are as outmoded. It's like bringing a knife to a gunfight. Cultural decryption is chess, not checkers. Arte Povera v2.0 is a scam, as is the false myth that there is so-called progression when it comes to visual art. There is no progression, in fact, the art world has moved backwards in terms of possessing and capitulating content which upends the established institutions of the age. This nonsense is no different. The avante garde is on second life writing apps to manipulate linden dollar, not at columbia or yale in studio tomming up to Larry Gagosian or some other art dealer. End securitization of art. Give it all away for free to the children.
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