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January
2 to February 6, 2010
Saturday, January 30, 2010, 6 to 9pm
In
Gallery 1
The Power of Selection, part 1
curated by Ryan Travis Christian
info |images|
press: Chicago
Reader | ArtSlant|
Time
Out Chicago
with
Alika Cooper, Mike Rea, Allison Schulnik, Marissa Textor, Eric
Yahnker |
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In
Gallery 2
Suitable Video: Works
from the Suitable Exhibitions Archive
curated by Scott Wolniak
info | images | press: Chicago
Reader
featuring work by
Charles
Irvin, Julia Hechtman, Sterling Ruby, John Neff, Sarah Conaway,
Kirsten Stoltmann, Paul Nudd, Miller & Shellabarger, Reed
Anderson & Daniel Davidson, Marc Schwartzberg, Ben Stone,
and Siebren Versteeg. |
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WESTERN
EXHIBITIONS
119 N Peoria St, Suite 2A
Chicago, IL 60607 USA
(312) 480-8390
scott@westernexhibitions.com
www.westernexhibitions.com |
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Public
Reception:
Saturday, January 30, 2010, 6 to 9pm
Gallery Hours:
Wednesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm |
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In
Gallery 1
The Power of Selection, part 1
Western
Exhibitions is pleased to present The Power of Selection,
the first in a series of three shows curated by
Ryan Travis Christian at the gallery. The show
begins on Saturday, January 2 and a public reception,
free and open to the public, will follow on Saturday,
January 30, from 6 to 9pm. Mr. Christian, who writes for
Fecalface.com and selects an Artist of the Day, each and
every day, on his Facebook page, organized these shows,
the first in January, the second in the summer and the
third in December, to increase the circulation of contemporary
artwork seen in Chicago by showing works by out of town
and/or up-and-coming artists. In this first installment,
Christian selected work that takes figuration into strange
and bewildering stylizations through the use of drawing,
sculpture and video.
Alika
Cooper lives and works in Los Angeles, CA
and has had solo exhibitions at Mark Wolfe Contemporary
(San Francisco), Kim Light/ Lightbox (LA), Hamish Morrison
Galerie (Berlin), and Galleria Studio Legale (Rome).
Mike
Rea lives and works in Chicago, IL and has
shown works at The Contemporary Art Center of Virginia,
Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, FFDG (San Francisco),
Synchronicity (Los Angeles), Morgan Conservatory (Cleveland)
and Hyde Park Art Center. In 2009, Rea was a 2009 West
Prize recipient.
Allison
Schulnik lives and works in Los Angeles,
CA and has had solo exhibitions at 1/9 Unosunove (Rome),
Mark Moore Gallery (Santa Monica), Mike Weiss (New York),
and Rokeby (London). She also makes stunning claymation
video works for the band Grizzly Bear.
Marissa
Textor lives and works in Los Angeles, CA
and has exhibited works at Subliminal Projects (Los Angeles)
The Studio (Los Angeles), and New Wight Gallery UCLA (Los
Angeles).
Eric
Yahnker lives and works in Los Angeles, CA
and has exhibited at Ambach and Rice (Seattle), Jack the
Pelican (Brooklyn), Polad-Hardoiun (Paris), Space (Portland),
and Kim Light/ Lightbox (Los Angeles) and the Torrance
Art Museum (CA).
Ryan
Travis Christian is an artist, independent
curator and the Chicago correspondent to the art and design
website Fecalface.com.
Recent curatorial projects include West, Wester, Westest
at FFDG (San Francisco), SPORTS at Synchronicity (Los
Angeles), and Control C, Control V at EbersMoore (Chicago).
He lives and works in Chicago.
In
Gallery 2
Suitable Video: Works from the
Suitable Exhibitions Archive
Suitable
Video Vol. 1: Curator’s Note
by Scott Wolniak
This program loosely organizes work by a number of artists
who showed at Suitable Gallery, a DIY
exhibition space located in Chicago’s Humboldt Park
neighborhood, during its 5 year run between 1999 and 2004.
It speaks more of a community of artists than of a curatorial
agenda. The process of selection and compilation began
as a straightforward effort to survey all the video work
shown at Suitable. Substitutions and omissions occurred
in response to logistic and aesthetic concerns. The resulting
program ultimately sought balance and watchability over
purity or completeness.
The content is disparate and varied. There is no thematic
or conceptual agenda, although several arise retrospectively
which may reflect the tastes involved in Suitable’s
original gallery programming. Subject matter found in
these pieces include humor, failure, the abject and degenerate,
the performative, roll playing, the body, art history,
art spaces, art materials, counter-culture, process, time,
death and love, to name a few. There is a tangible sense
of utility in much of the work- they do not seem fussed
over, they communicate directly.
A good example of this directness is found in Kirsten
Stoltmann’s “I Spill my Guts
Everyday for Nothing”, 2002. The trope of Hollywood
special effect is combined with conventions of early Feminist
performance video to darkly illustrate emotional vulnerability.
The fact that Stoltmann is spilling ‘real’
guts, procured from a butcher, out of her duct-taped prosthetic
tummy is almost too disturbing. The look of it is nasty,
for sure, but we are only given a quick glimpse, as it
slides out of the ruptured skin and hits the floor with
a splat. It is in the extended view we have of her face
that the true horror/ humor is revealed. As she confronts
the camera, pallid and pasty, there is tension between
her facial-expression and the resonant splat from guts
hitting that black-and-white tile floor.
The hand-made and the gross come together again in videos
by
Paul Nudd and Charles
Irvin. Nudd is famous for brewing up pools
of slime and mucous from art supplies and food. They are
playful, like a child blowing milk bubbles, but the effect
of viscous ooze quickly turns real, abject, snotty and
stomach turning. Nudd managed even to disturb himself
with his piece “Worm Death”, 2000, in which
an anonymous phallic drone protrudes from a wet mustardy
crevasse, and loudly oinks.
Irvin’s 1999 video “O’Malley’s
Head” is a long trance-inducing piece about a baby
and a head. Documentation of a cute, cooing baby playing
with a ridiculous wide-eyed, decapitated head (presumably
O’Malley’s) is edited to over-the-top Gerber-baby
squawk, creating an experience that is kitsch and funny,
but mostly just mental.
“Macho-Shogun”, 2000, by Reed
Anderson and Daniel
Davidson is a juvenile B-movie fantasy brought
to life with the methods and materials of an Ab-Ex sculptor.
An entire city constructed from cardboard and paint is
destroyed in battle between two robot-creatures (also
made of cardboard and paint). In an especially dramatic
slow-motion fight sequence, the hairy legs and wrestling-suit
of a performer are sited through the sloppy seams of one
of the cardboard robot suits. This humorous moment reveals
the artists behind the action, contextualizing the performers
and the scale of the set, and allowing us to remember
that through all of the smoke and fire and smashing, this
is a construct of ludic delight.
Another moment of pure play comes in Ben
Stone’s “High Five”, 1999.
This piece takes the form of a home move, a document of
low-stakes backyard competition. Three friends run a small
course then high-five each other, with a cheesy little
digital effect for flourish. Everyone cheers and the piece
is over in 40 seconds. It is so sweet; it makes me want
a juice box.
An interesting sub-narrative for this program can be found
in the media itself. These works were made during a transitional
time for video, as the standard was shifting from VHS
to miniDV circa Hi8 and Digital8. There was no home DVD
authoring, and certainly no projectors. It is funny to
think that most of the video shown back then was displayed
on crummy little monitors with built-in VHS players. Tapes
would be prepped for auto-rewind, and viewers would experience
art through awkward apparatus.
Some of works literally embody these historical phases
in their media identities, such as “Shooter”
by Marc Schwartzberg, for which the conversion
sequence reads Hi-8 to VHS to miniDV to DVD. This piece
certainly cannot be harmed by quality loss, as the content
is already so far outside of what might be considered
‘good’. Acts of half-baked posturing, sidewalk
intimidation and spitting are captured on a shaky hand-held
camera then set to the music of Motorhead. The resulting
video is like of a C-grade A/V project made by a high
school burnout.
Other works reflect format conversions visually. Degraded
resolution can reveal a history of over-dubs and bad signals.
Sarah Conaway’s piece “Two
Dogs and a Ball”- a cover of William Wegman’s
piece of the same title from the late 60’s, gains
from its degree of quality loss. In this case it is brought
it closer to the chopped and fuzzy original. This lack
of fidelity is kind of comforting- a magnetic patina to
antique vintage moving images, evoking authenticity and
contrasting today’s pixel perfect HD.
The newest work in the program is “Inevitable (NTSC
Version)” by Siebren
Versteeg, from 2008, which functions as a
departure. Produced four years after Suitable closed,
this piece was included to refer back to Versteeg’s
2001 solo project in the gallery but also to look ahead,
thinking about the possibility for future manifestations
of Suitable Video. This piece speaks poetically of the
kind forward and backward technological trajectory that
this program engages, traversing between old-school manual
work with hands and tools, to low-res pixels and, eventually,
high-definition multiplicity.
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