Western
Exhibitions will open two new shows on Friday, September 11 with
a public reception from 5 to 8pm. In Gallery 1, PAUL NUDD
will show new paintings, drawing and collages. In Gallery 2, DAN
ATTOE will present one new painting and several of his
“daily drawings”. Please also join us on Thursday, September
24 for a gallery talk with Paul Nudd at 6pm.
In
Gallery 1
Paul Nudd
Paul Nudd will pack the gallery with new paintings and drawings
inspired by and depicting what the artist calls the “peri-anal
universe”. Although his muse is an abject one; the works can’t
help but reveal a strange and elegant beauty. The works’ coloristic
and formal contrasts, as described below, are manifestations of
Nudd’s primary interest: the decaying natural world as seen
against the artificiality of the made world.
The paintings on canvas refer to microscopic lifeforms, often looking
like exceptionally well-designed bacterial samples squashed between
two glass slides. Nudd refers to the works’ primary compositional
elements as “blobs” – oval shapes, painted or
collaged onto the raw canvas, that are replicated in varying sizes
and colors (usually earth tones, but also shocking pinks and reds)
across the canvas. Occasionally, the artist’s blobs are punctuated
with low-relief “nuclei” crafted from nuggets of modeling
clay in high-keyed colors. Nudd’s color flips back and forth
between differing approaches to the visceral; pop-candy colors vibrate
against the dingy fake vomit tones; unbleached titanium clashes
with fleshy hues.
At a glance, the paintings seem busy, out of control – randomly
mixing colors and shapes. But dedicated viewing reveals the paintings
to be carefully composed portraits of filth and decay: gooey puddles,
fussy swaths of sludge, scumbles of strange substances, delicate
stains, wisps of string, hair, felt and fake vomit settle on the
plain of the blank canvas like scabs on smooth skin.
Despite the artist’s self-proclaimed efforts to make “gross-out”
art, Nudd’s paintings are perversely attractive, disgustingly
hilarious and infinitely engaging. As Anthony Elms notes in a recent
essay on Nudd’s work, “See, it is possible to giggle,
panic, and squirm at the same time, and that is what Paul’s
artwork consistently aims to induce.” Nudd maps a world –
or as he says, a fishtank – of bacterial delights. As he states
in a recent interview with Evan Lennox (available at the gallery),
“I don't aim to offend anyone; on the contrary, I want people
to engage with my work for as long as possible. I just think there
is an entire abyss of color combinations, forms, textures, and approaches
to making things that people need to see. Crust, slop, and meditations
on fake vomit and its uses are all interesting points of departure.”
This is Paul Nudd’s second solo show at Western Exhibitions.
Recent solo and two-person shows include Jack the Pelican Presents
in Brooklyn, telephonebooth in Kansas City and the Hyde Park Art
Center, Bodybuilder & Sportsmen, and Dogmatic, all in Chicago,
and group shows at Andreas Bruning Gallery in Dusseldorf, the Evanston
Art Center, the Soap Factory in Minneapolis, and Mixture Contemporary
in Houston. He recently completed a collaborative printmaking residency
with Onsmith at the Spudnik Press in Chicago and his zines and artist
books are in several institutional artist book collections across
the country. He is a recent recipient of an Illinois Arts Council
grant. Paul Nudd received his MFA from the University of Illinois-Chicago
in 2001 and he lives and works in Berwyn, Illinois.
In
Gallery 2
Dan Attoe
The shock rocker (and now horror film director) Rob Zombie’s
floating head looms over 6 pairs of kayakers on a melancholy seascape
in Dan Attoe’s new oil painting, “Sea Kayakers (You
Are Not Special)”. The Zombie apparition, a recurring prophet
in Attoe’s work, spouts a cryptic aphorism, in text delicately
rendered by the artist. Is this phrase directed to us, the viewers,
or to the kayakers, or both?
“Sea Kayakers (You Are Not Special)” anchors Dan Attoe’s
solo show in Western Exhibitions Gallery 2. He will also present
several “daily drawings”, an extension of a past project
of making a small painting every day over a couple of years. In
these drawings, Attoe illustrates whatever is holding his interest
at the moment, be it a Far Side cartoon, rock and rollers, whatever
happened in the local bar last night, a scene from one of the Pacific
Northwest’s legendary strip clubs, or a depiction of the Pacific
Northwest’s legendary topography. He uses these drawings as
foundations for paintings and neon sculptures and makes them in
a stream of consciousness manner, letting the images, text and ideas
that pop into his head make their way onto the paper. Attoe states
in a recent interview, available at the gallery, that “there
is no overarching theme to my work, there are things that pop up
frequently because of where I live, or because of things I was interested
in as a kid, etc. I like to leave the subject matter open to interpretation.”
This is Dan Attoe’s second solo show with Western Exhibitions.
The gallery also hosted his collaborative installation troupe Paintallica
for a wild show in 2006. Attoe will be having a concurrent show
at Peres Projects in Los Angeles, with whom he has had 5 prior solo
shows. Other solo shows include MUSAC in Leon, Spain, Vilma Gold
in London and 404 Arte Contemporanea in Naples. Group shows include
the Museum of Contemporary Art in Bordeaux, France, AMP in Athens,
Galleria Maria de Cardenas in Milan, the Saatchi Gallery in London
and the Portland Art Museum in Oregon. His work has been discussed
in Artforum, Artforum.com, Contemporary, Paper, Los Angeles Times,
Art Review and LA Weekly. Paintallica recently completed an installation
at the Country Club gallery in Los Angeles. Dan Attoe received his
MFA from the University of Iowa in 2004 and he lives and works just
outside of Portland, Oregon.