| In
Gallery 1

Black Thorns
in the White Cube
curated by
Amelia Ishmael
Even
with gloves, collecting a tangled specimen of thorny vines into
a box is a precarious situation. Like a frenzied cat, the thorns
spur out in all directions, their firm stems snap, rebound,
and unfurl. Attempting to curl them into more manageable forms
is natural. And perilous. Consider yourself enchanted if you
get through the entire endeavor without scratches or punctures.
And once you think you’ve bound them? They pierce through
the sides of the box. Refusing to be contained.
An exhibition of Black Metal artworks is a thorny occasion.
Summoned by Amelia Ishmael, “Black Thorns
in the White Cube” is a traveling exhibition presenting
a selection of photography, prints, drawings, and artist books
by eight contemporary artists who are influenced by the heavy,
dark, and mystic obscurity of Black Metal music. Based in the
United States and Europe participating artists include Alexander
Binder (Stuttgart, Germany), Vincent Como
(Brooklyn), Terence Hannum (Baltimore), Karlynn
Holland (Brooklyn), Elodie Lesourd (Paris,
France), Aaron Metté (Brooklyn), Christophe
Szpajdel (Exeter, U.K.), Grant Willing
(Brooklyn), and Tereza Zelenkova (London, England).
Engaging with the symbols, history, and myths of the Black Metal
music subculture, their images explore haunted Germanic forests,
descents into the void, visual translations of sonic experiences,
ontologies of Black Metal band logos, and barren western landscapes.
Together their artwork contributes to the discourse currently
occurring in Black Metal theory, examines the innovations and
significance of contemporary Black Metal visual art, and offers
an account of its critical disruptions.
Thick gloves are not required attire to view this exhibition,
but we cannot hold ourselves accountable for any cerebral wounds
inflicted during your experience.
Amelia Ishmael is an artist whose practice includes critiquing,
historicising, teaching, and curating other artists' practices.
She has shared her gleanings on Black Metal and Contemporary
Art at conferences internationally, including the Black Metal
Theory Symposium in London and the Home of Metal Conference
in Wolverhampton, U.K. Her writings have also appeared in ArtSlant,
Art Papers, and Review. She received a BFA in Photography and
New Media from the Kansas City Art Institute and a MA in Modern
Art History, Theory, and Criticism from the School of the Art
Institute of Chicago, and was an Urban Culture Project studio
resident.
The artists:
Alexander Binder is a self-taught photographer
based in Stuttgart, Germany. Born on Halloween night in the
Black Forest/Germany Binder’s lenses are mostly built
from optical toys, old soviet cameras, prisms or plastic crap.
His photographs have been exhibited at Viktor Wynd Fine Art
(London), Sugar (New York), and Feinkunst Krüger (Hamburg).
Binder’s images have also featured on album covers for
Stephen O’Malley, Ural Umbo, and Black Mountain Transmitter.
Vincent Como is an artist and curator based
in Brooklyn, NY. He received his BFA from the Cleveland Institute
of Art. He has exhibited at Proof Gallery (Boston), Western
Exhibitions (Chicago), and VONZWECK (Chicago). Como has given
presentations at the Black Metal Theory Symposium, the Contemporary
Artists Books Conference, and the Bruce High Quality Foundation.
In addition, he is co-founder of Horse Trader Gallery in Brooklyn.
Terence Hannum is an artist and musician based
in Baltimore, MD. He earned his BFA from Florida Southern College
and MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Has
had solo exhibitions at Western Exhibitions, the Chicago Cultural
Center and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, and group
exhibitions at Locatie Z, The Hague (Netherlands), telephonebooth
(Kansas City), and San Francisco Cinamatheque. Hannum has performed
music solo, with Locrian and Unlucky Atlas, and in collaboration
with Nicolas Lobo at De La Cruz Collection in Miami and Scott
Treleaven at Kavi Gupta Gallery in Chicago.
Karlynn Holland is an artist and curator based
in Brooklyn. She earned her BA from University of Chicago and
a Certificate in Forensic Sculpture from the New York Academy
of Art. She has exhibited at the Smart Museum of Art (Chicago)
and the New Art Center (Boston). Holland has designed logos
for Dysrhythmia, Astomatous, and Krallice, and has collaborated
with Kai Althoff and Brandon Stosuy in the exhibition “Mirror
Me” at Dispatch Gallery, NY. Her ongoing curatorial project
“Dreams Were Made for Mortals” is presented by St.
Vitus, NYC.
Elodie Lesourd is an artist and musician based in Paris,
France. She completed her Post Graduate studies at the Ecole
des Beaux-Arts in Nantes and earned her DNSEP from the Ecole
Nationale des Beaux-Arts in Lyon. Lesourd has exhibited at Olivier
Robert Gallery (Paris), Minus Space (New York City), and Center
for Contemporary Art (Lausanne, Switzerland). She has performed
at her exhibitions at Les Eglises Contemporary Art Center (Chelles),
MAC/VAL (Vitry-sur-Seine), and Cartier Foundation for Contemporary
Art (Paris). In addition, Lesourd was a guest editor to the
May 2011 issue of C.S. Journal.
Aaron Metté is an artist and musician
based in Brooklyn. He received a BFA from University of Louisville
and a MFA from the University of Pennsylvania. He has exhibited
at Michael Steinberg Fine Arts (New York) and Crane Arts Center
(Philadelphia), and collaborated with Terry Adkins in the performance
“Invocation to Bessie Smith” at P.S.1 MoMA Center
for Contemporary Art. Metté also leads experimental sound
classes and workshops at 3rd Ward.
Christophe
Szpajdel is an artist based in Exeter, U.K. Specializing
in Black and Death Metal design, his work includes logos for
the bands Emperor, Moonspell, Wolves in the Throne Room, Nachtmystium,
and Enthroned, and for the 2008 documentary “Until the
Light Takes Us.” Szpajdel’s work has been published
in the 2008 compendium “Logos from Hell” and his
2010 monograph “Lord of the Logos.” He has exhibited
at the Walker Art Center (Minneapolis) and Studio Krimm (Berlin).
Grant Willing is a photographer based in Brooklyn.
He earned his BFA from Parson’s New School for Design.
His works has been exhibited at Interurban Gallery (Vancouver),
Foam Fotografiemuseum (Amsterdam), and Corridor Gallery (Brooklyn).
His artist books have featured at the NY Art Book Fair at PS1
MoMA, Indie Photobook Library at in Washington DC and Toronto,
and Self Publish, Be Happy at the Photographer’s Gallery
in London.
Tereza Zelenkova is a photographer based in
London. She earned her BA from University of Westminster and
is currently a MA candidate at the Royal College of Art. Her
work has been exhibited by Jerwood Art Space (London), HotShoe
Gallery(London), and the Chelsea Museum of Art (NY). Zelenkova’s
photography series Supreme Vice was published
by Morel Books.
Above logo by Christophe
Szpajdel
“Black
Thorns in the White Cube” travels to Western Exhibitions
from Kansas City where Paragraph
Gallery exhibited the show from January 20 to March 3, 2012
and was covered by The
Pitch Weekly, Cupcakes
in Regalia and CVLT
Nation (twice)
In
conjunction with the visual art exhibition, Amelia Ishmael and
Bryan Wendorf have curated a screening of experimental film
and video, "Black Thorns in the Black Box" to be presented
on March 23, 2012 at The Nightingale in Chicago:
BLACK
THORNS IN THE BLACK BOX
curated by Amelia Ishmael and Bryan Wendorf
An experimental screening of moving images that resonate
with the heavy, dark, and mystic obscurity of Black Metal music
Artists: Annie Feldmeier Adams for Locrian (Chicago), Gast Bouschet
& Nadine Hilbert (Brussels, Belgium), Una Hamilton Helle
(London, England), Devin Horan (Brooklyn), Hunter Hunt-Hendrix
(Brooklyn), Ruth Jarman & Joe Gerhardt of Semiconductor
(Brighton, England), Chris Kennedy (Toronto, Canada), Marianna
Milhorat (Chicago), Jimmy Joe Roche (Baltimore), Shazzula for
Cultus Sabbati (Brussels, Belgium), and Michaël Sellam
(Paris, France)
When: Friday, March 23, 2012 at 7pm
Admission: $7-10 (sliding scale)
Location: The Nightingale
Address: 1084 N. Milwaukee, Chicago, IL
Black Thorns in the Black Box is a touring screening of experimental
film and video by eleven contemporary artists whose work resonates
with the heavy, dark, and mystic obscurity of Black Metal music.
Its screening in Chicago on March 23, 2012 coincides with the
gallery exhibition Black Thorns in the White Cube-on view March
16 through April 14 at Western Exhibitions.
Based throughout Northern America and Europe, the participating
artists include Annie Feldmeier Adams for Locrian (Chicago),
Gast Bouschet & Nadine Hilbert (Brussels, Belgium), Una
Hamilton Helle (London, England), Devin Horan (Brooklyn), Hunter
Hunt-Hendrix (Brooklyn), Ruth Jarman & Joe Gerhardt of Semiconductor
(Brighton, England), Chris Kennedy (Toronto, Canada), Marianna
Milhorat (Chicago), Jimmy Joe Roche (Baltimore), Shazzula for
Cultus Sabbati (Brussels, Belgium), and Michaël Sellam
(Paris, France). This screening of Black Thorns in the Black
Box is organized into three parts-the underground, the earth,
and the heavens-according to the three branches of Medieval
concepts of music-musica mundana, musica humana, and musica
instrumentalis-to explore how Black Metal has permeated all
known spheres of creation.
About the curators:
Amelia Ishmael is an artist whose practice includes critiquing,
historicising, teaching, and curating other artists' practices.
Her current projects include the traveling art exhibition "Black
Thorns in the White Cube" (currently on view at Paragraph
Gallery in Kansas City, MO) and co-editing and curating pages
for the academic journal Helvete. She studied studio art and
art history at the Kansas City Art Institute and the School
of the Art Institute of Chicago, and has published articles
on contemporary art with The WIRE, Art21.com, ArtSlant Chicago,
and Art Papers.
Bryan Wendorf co-founded the Chicago Underground Film Festival
in 1994 and remains its Programmer and Artistic Director. He
has served on the board of directors of IFP Chicago and has
curated film programs including Conversations At The Edge at
the Gene Siskel Film Center (Chicago), Transmediale (Berlin)
and the Revelation Film Festival (Perth). He studied fine art
at Columbia College Chicago, and has written articles about
film, music, comics and popular culture for a variety of publications
including New City, Indiewire, It's Only A Move!, and Wormwood
Chronicles
More here: http://www.facebook.com/BlackThornsintheBlackBox
|