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I Have Many Hobbies

January 5, 2024 - February 17, 2024

Western Exhibitions is thrilled to present Gayleen Aiken’s first ever show in Chicago, Gayleen Aiken: I Have Many Hobbies, organized by Peter Gallo and Sean Horton. Gayleen Aiken (1934 – 2005), a self-taught artist from Barre, Vermont, produced paintings and drawings that combined narrative text and image, cardboard cut-outs, and handmade books, often featuring a cast of recurring characters which she called the Raimbilli Cousins, members of an imaginary extended family that she invented as a child. The show will open in Gallery 2 at Western Exhibitions’ Chicago location with a free public reception on Friday, January 5, from 5 to 8 pm, and will run through February 17, 2023.

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I first saw Gayleen Aiken’s paintings at an upstairs gallery and frame shop in Hanover, New Hampshire in the late summer of 1980. I was a college student at the time and had gone to the gallery to attend the opening of a show of etchings by one of my professors. A small exhibition of Gayleen’s work was arranged in a narrow out-of the way hall. It was scarcely attended and those few who did wander through from the evening’s main event were not so receptive. The show featured perhaps a dozen small pictures, some of them postcard size, mostly oil on canvas board or window blind fabric glued to cardboard, hanging from string. The paintings depicted her now famous Raimbilli Cousins cavorting under the moonlight set in skies more reminiscent of Ensor or Nolde than Grandma Moses.

The display was presided over by a short, sturdy, amiable fellow in Birkenstock’s, smoking hand-rolled cigarettes, the artist Don Sunseri. Later I would learn that Gayleen, even after her star had risen, very rarely left her hometown of Barre, Vermont, and its surrounding environs. This was my first acquaintance with Don, and the beginning of our long friendship; Don started the Grass Roots Art and Community Efforts in the mid-1970’s after leaving Manhattan for Vermont’s rural Northeast Kingdom, and discovered Gayleen’s paintings at local art shows and county fairs. He eventually became her friend, promoter, and collaborator. This was one of the first solo shows he organized of her work.

Assembling the works for this exhibition has been, in many ways, a second chance for me to experience Gayleen’s work for the first time. It was also bittersweet as I revisited my memories of Gayleen, but also of my great friendship with Don who predeceased Gayleen in 2002. I sorted through hundreds of things many of which have never been publicly exhibited – and which perhaps Don had not even seen. Most of these works were discovered in the artist’s small living space after her death in 2005. These included, among other things, paintings, drawings, signs, cut-out figures, lists, broadsides, scrapbooks, handmade chapbooks and comics which are still being sorted through and documented at the former G.R.A.C.E. gallery in Hardwick, VT, which currently functions as a sort of makeshift archive for Gayleen’s enormous body of work.

Gayleen was a multi-media performance artist and the endless stream of artifacts she created were the elements of a sprawling but never finished gesamtkunstwerk. Those of us who had the good fortune to visit the artist at her home had to commit, prior to arrival, entire afternoons which she filled with elaborate and sometimes relentless programs of music, poetry, art, puppet shows, demonstrations of her latest gadgets, samplings of her fabulous record and music roll collections (among the many marvelous things in her tiny living space was an upright player piano…). I remember most fondly one winter afternoon Don and I arrived for a very short visit. Gayleen had arranged three colored lights – red, blue and green – on a dresser and spent the time making marvelous observations about the spectrum of light that bathed the wall behind them; it was stunning.

It is highly unlikely that a small selection (no matter how large that small selection might be!) of Aiken’s works could convey the range and beauty of her project; or the degree to which her life and her art were interwoven; there is simply so much material and so many ways to approach it. For example an entire exhibition could be devoted to the way her work documents the technological transformation of musical experience during the second part of the last century. Beginning in the late 1950’s Gayleen even made extensive notations in her scrapbooks on who bought televisions in her neighborhood! Another could map out the ways that modernity during her lifetime had transfigured the countryside between villages and cities from orchards to strip-malls and housing developments. What this selection does highlight is the degree Gayleen devoted herself to her subjects and themes and the brilliant maneuvers she pulled off to keep these subjects and themes so alive.

Peter Gallo

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Gayleen Aiken (1934-2005, Barre, VT) has been featured in exhibitions at the American Visionary Museum, Baltimore; the Fairbanks Museum, St. Johnsbury, VT; the Vermont Granite Museum, Barre, VT; the Henry Sheldon Museum of Vermont History, Middlebury; the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Folk Art Museum, Williamsburg, VA; the Gallery at Lincoln Center, New York; Horton Gallery, New York; Luise Ross Gallery, New York; and KS Art, New York; among others.

The artist is in the permanent collection of the American Folk Art Museum, the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Museum of American Folk Art, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the Smithsonian American Art Museum, among others. She is the subject of Jay Craven’s award-winning film, Gayleen, and was a recipient of a Vermont Council on the Arts fellowship. In 1997, Harry B. Abrams, Inc. released Moonlight and Music: The Enchanted World of Gayleen Aiken. Her artwork has been featured in The New York Times, Raw Vision, The Brooklyn Rail and The Boston Globe.

Her work is currently featured in If You Build It, They Will Come: Visionary Artists & Their Environments at the American Visionary Museum, Baltimore.

 

Curators:

Peter Gallo (born 1959 in Rutland, Vermont) is an artist, writer, and educator who lives and works in Hyde Park, VT. Gallo’s artwork is represented by Sean Horton in New York and Anthony Reynolds Gallery in London, UK. As an artist, Gallo draws from a wide variety of sources—art historical, political, and literary—and often incorporates poetic, philosophical, and found texts in his mixed-media paintings. He utilizes simple formal structures which emphasize the materiality of painting, and his works alternate between or combine both abstract and figurative elements. His paintings often incorporate unconventional materials, including buttons, toothpicks, newspaper clippings, found photographs, string, typed texts, dental floss, and chicken bones. His “improvisatory” style has been compared to that of Ree Morton, Joy Division, and Forrest Bess. Critic Jonathon Goodman (Brooklyn Rail) writes that in current art trends, this kind of “ad hoc creativity often serves to mask poor skills, but in Gallo’s case, the rawness is a genuine part of his aesthetic, whose ungainliness keeps us thinking.” Gallo’s works have been featured in solo and group exhibitions in the United States and Europe, and are included in notable collections of contemporary art.

Sean Horton (born 1975 in Dodd City, Texas) is an arts professional with over twenty years of experience working directly with artists, patrons, and press to produce exhibitions and garner public support. Horton presented the New York solo debuts of Elijah Burgher, Leidy Churchman, Corydon Cowansage, Lauren dela Roche, Keltie Ferris, Kate Groobey, Kirk Hayes, Madjeen Isaac, Natasza Niedziółka, and Nyugen E. Smith, among others. Widely reviewed gallery exhibitions have also included those by Peter Gallo, Clare Grill, Michael Jones McKean, and Aaron Spangler. Horton has exhibited outsider artists Gayleen Aiken, David Byrd, Royal Robertson, and Miroslav Tichý, as well as artwork by notable indie musicians and filmmakers Martha Colburn, Joel Gibb, and G.B. Jones. The gallery has hosted live musical performances by David Bazan, Kath Bloom, Geechee Dan, and L’Amour Bleu (with Stanley Love). He currently operates SEAN HORTON at 515 West 20th Street, 3rd Floor in the Chelsea neighborhood of New York City.

In 2005, Sean Horton curated Old Nickelodeon and a Game of Catch, which paired the artist with a younger, emerging artist, for Burlington City Arts. In 2007, Peter Gallo curated Our Yard In The Future, a survey of the artist’s work, for Sunday LES (Horton Gallery), New York following his inclusion of her work in the traveling group exhibition Insider Art in 1990.

 

Watch a narrated video walkthrough of the exhibition below:


Named Rose

February 23, 2024 - April 6, 2024

Juliet Jacobson makes pictures about pictures. Her still life drawings, made with gouache on paper and a patient tender hand, are meditations on how images are constructed. Jacobson makes pictures that are not so much about what is depicted, but rather about the experience of seeing, investigating the slipperiness of perceived reality. This show, her first at Western Exhibitions, opens in Gallery 2 at our Chicago location, alongside Elijah Burgher’s show in Gallery 1. A free public reception will be held on Friday, February 23 from 5 to 8pm. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm.

Jacobson borrows from a literary approach when assembling her compositions. She takes particular inspiration from how novels are able to combine a dizzying number of perspectives, prompting readers to juggle different characters’ voices and variable modes of address, each with a unique frame of reference. The process for each drawing includes painting, photography and collage. She often uses photographic material, posters, prints, or stock photos as substrate for her compositions. The original single-point perspective embedded in photographic material becomes fragmented when rephotographed. This is complicated even more by the undulating surface of crumpled or torn paper, further highlighting the many facets of perspective.

Jacobson depicts elements at actual size on top of their photographic referents. These elements are drawn from everyday life. For this show she has focused on roses, each with a different backstory: garden flowers stolen from a parking lot near the studio; blooms plucked from outside her apartment window; and showy commercial varieties purchased in bodegas and upscale flower shops. Each plant is rendered in a trompe l’oeil manner with great fidelity and detail. Each photograph is portrayed with hyper realism, capturing everything from lens distortion to the crinkle of the photographic paper. These works also often include Jacobson’s own art-making process, such as dabs of paint in the margins of the picture where she has tested color, areas of negative space, and half-rendered areas that appear unfinished. These modulations in process offer a more directly graphical mode of expression. Because of this Jacobson’s drawings are philosophical meditations on the blend of clarity and confusion that accompanies everyday acts of sensing, looking, and knowing.

Juliet Jacobson (b. 1977, Puyallup, WA) has shown work in the 2008 Busan Biennial in Korea, The Warehouse Gallery at Syracuse University, and in group exhibitions at The Sphinx Northeast in Hudson, NY, Ritter/Zamet in London, AreoPlastics in Brussels, and in New York City at Klaus von Nichtssagend, Blackston, and Friedrich Petzel. She has had solo exhibitions at Planthouse and Two Rams, both in New York City, Season in Seattle, and Kevin Bruk in Miami. Jacobson’s work was recently featured on Platform and has been written about in The New York Times, Artforum and Art News. Jacobson received her BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1999 and her MFA from New York University in 2006. She currently splits time between New York City and Cold Spring, NY.


Our Lady of the Latrines

February 23, 2024 - April 6, 2024

Western Exhibitions is thrilled to present our fifth solo show with Elijah Burgher. In Our Lady of the Latrines, Burgher focuses his ongoing engagement with iconography from ancient history and religion in a new series of drawings that take as their subject the notorious 3rd century Roman emperor, Elagabalus. The drawings will be accompanied by a presentation of sketchbook pages and research notes as well as an essay by the artist exploring the occult dimensions of the myths surrounding the life of the emperor. Our Lady of the Latrines opens in Gallery 1, alongside Juliet Jacobson’s show in Gallery 2, at our Chicago location on Friday, February 23 with a free public reception from 5 to 8pm. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm.

During their* brief reign, the teenage emperor, Elagabalus, shocked the senate, soldiers, and general public by replacing Jupiter at the summit of the pantheon with the Syrian solar deity, Elagabal; coercing senators to participate in rituals from the eastern provinces that they deemed exotic and uncouth; and committing the sacrilege of marrying a vestal virgin so as to bear god-like children. They were also said to have made political appointments based on penis size, prostituted themself in the imperial palace, built a luxurious suicide tower so they could perish in style, and smothered guests to death at a dinner party with an avalanche of flower petals. Elagabalus ruled a mere four years until their assassination by the praetorian guard in 222. By one account, they hid from their pursuers in the palace latrines where they were discovered and slain. These thrilling but dubious stories and others like them form the basis of Elagabalus’s myth: the boy emperor as corrupt tyrant, sexual deviant and religious zealot. In the modern period, starting roughly with the Decadent art movement, Elagabalus’s fortunes began to turn. They have been subsequently recast as an uncompromising aesthete, anarchist and sexual martyr. Originally demonised, Elagabalus has belatedly been deified by their admirers nearly two millennia after their death.

In Burgher’s essay on the emperor, originally published in Religious Studies Review and presented at the Occulture Conference in October 2023, he brackets considerations of the historical person who came to be known as Elagabalus and focuses on the myths and legends surrounding them instead. He interprets these accumulated stories and images as the centuries-long formation of an egregore, a spiritual entity generated by collective patterns of belief. Burgher states that “the concept has the advantage of emphasising a collective relationship to images, and positing both the demonic power of those images and the agency of individuals and communities in sustaining and even drawing power from those images through imagination and ritual.” He additionally asks what a belated deification and contemporary cult of Elagabalus would entail: “What is her desire? How do those of us who count ourselves amongst her lovers best serve her? What do we gain—or lose—in devoting ourselves to her?”

Burgher sketches a response to these questions in “Our Lady of the Latrines” through sustained meditation on the likeness of Elagabalus, drawing from surviving imperial busts and coins as well as later representations in the works of Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Simeon Solomon and others. The artist elaborates their image with hatched colored pencil over washes of watercolor. The technique imparts a flickering, chromatically intense surface to the portraits that summons the spirit of the emperor into the present. Other works depict salacious anecdotes about the emperor’s life. “Judgment of Paris” pictures Elagabalus playing the role of Venus on stage while senators in the audience react with a mixture of disgust and excitement. In “The Black Stone,” an orgy of revellers gyrate around the phallic meteorite that was the focal point of the cult of which the emperor served as high priest. In these latter works, Burgher loosens his grip on his materials, allowing his line to dance more freely around the paper and the watercolors to pool and reticulate. These modestly scaled works on paper serve a devotional function while ironically engaging with the hoary conventions of history painting. The exhibition will also include a selection of Burgher’s sketchbook pages, composition studies and research notes, a key component of his practice that has not been regularly shown.

*Elagabalus’s gender and sexuality have been the subject of recent debates. For instance, the North Hertfordshire Museum in the UK recently reclassified Elagabalus as transgender and now uses “she/her’ pronouns for the emperor. This press release makes use of “they/them” to encompass traditional and revisionist accounts of the historical person as well as their many mythic avatars, including fin de siècle, surrealist, gay, and trans renderings of the emperor’s story and image.

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Elijah Burgher is an artist and occasional writer currently living in Berlin. His work was featured in Scrivere Disegnando: When Language Seeks Its Other at Centre d’Art Contemporain, 2020; For Opacity at the Drawing Center in New York City, 2018; the 2014 Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City; the 2014 Gwangju Biennial; and The Temptation of AA Bronson at the Kunstinstituut Melly in Rotterdam, 2014. He has recently exhibited at the Schwules Museum in Berlin, LAXART in Los Angeles and the Des Moines Art Center in Iowa. He has attended residencies at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and the Fire Island Artist Residency. His work has been discussed in The New York TimesArt in AmericaFrieze, ArtReview, Artforum and was included in VITAMIN D2, the hardcover survey of contemporary drawing. He received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BA from Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York. Elijah Burgher is represented by P.P.O.W in New York City, Western Exhibitions in Chicago and Ivan Gallery in Bucharest.


More Drawings about Buildings and Food

January 7, 2024 - April 20, 2024

More Drawings about Buildings and Food

Selections from four Progressive Studios:
Arts of Life, LAND Gallery + Studio, Project Onward, and Visionaries + Voices

More Drawings about Buildings and Food celebrates Western Exhibitions’ relationship with and fandom of artists from four progressive studios— Arts of Life from Chicago, LAND from Brooklyn, Visionaries + Voices [V+V] from Cincinnati, and Project Onward from Chicago — all non-for-profit studios that provide space, materials, mentorship, and exhibition opportunities to adult visual artists with disabilities.

More Drawings about Buildings and Food (the show title riffs on the art rock band Talking Heads’ second album) will feature drawings (and sculpture) about buildings (and cities and architecture) by Courtney Cooper, Kareem Davis, and Ricky Willis; drawings (and paintings) about food by Raquel Albarran, Kenya Hanley, Noel Herrera and  Cathrine Whited; exultations of rock stars and celebrities in multiple mediums by Bill Lilly, Michael Pellew (including Pellew’s near life-sized sculpture of David Byrne from the aforementioned Talking Heads), and David Holt; portraiture, still lifes and quirky narratives by Carlo Daleo, William Douglas, Elmer, Andrew Hostick, Trip Huggins, Byron Smith, and Mark Smith; and wildly varied approaches to abstraction in drawings and assemblages by Jenny Crowe, Garrol Gayden, Christianne Msall, Susan Pasowicz, and Hubert Posey.

More Drawings about Buildings and Food, a companion exhibition to Courttney Cooper’s solo show at our Chicago space, opens at (northern) Western Exhibitions in SKOKIE, on Sunday, January 7, 12 to 4pm at 7933 N Lincoln Ave, Skokie, Illinois. Gallery hours at Thu-Sat, 12-6pm, and Sundays, 12-4pm.

Western Exhibitions’ founder Scott Speh was introduced to Courttney Cooper’s work at V+V in Cincinnati in 2011 and was blown away by his large maps of Cincinnati, drawn from memory; intricate and throbbing with energy. Shortly thereafter, Cooper was included in the four-person show Indirect Observation at Western Exhibitions, featuring works based on idiosyncratic observations and notational processes, and was subsequently added to the gallery roster. Since then, Western Exhibitions has presented artists from these studios at the Outsider Art Fair, NADA Miami and EXPO Chicago and in five solo shows at the gallery: Cooper in 2016, Michael Pellew in 2018 and 2022; Andrew Hostick in 2019; Kareem Davis in 2021; and two group shows, Visionaries + Voices at Western Exhibitions in 2020 and Bed-Stuy to Chi: Artists from LAND Studio & Gallery in 2022. Cathrine Whited will have her first solo show with the gallery in September 2024.

Participating artists listed here, bios are below:

Arts of Life:
Noel Herrera
Bill Lilly
Christianne Msall
Susan Pasowicz
Hubert Posey

LAND:
Raquel Albarran
Carlo Daleo
Garrol Gayden
Kenya Hanley
Michael Pellew
Byron Smith

Project Onward:
Kareem Davis
William Douglas
David Holt
Ricky Willis

Visionaries + Voices:
Courttney Cooper
Jenny Crowe
Elmer
Andrew Hostick
Trip Huggins
Mark Smith
Cathrine Whited

 

Arts of Life

Noel Herrera (b. 1999) creates marker drawings that are direct extensions of his everyday life and interests, paying tribute to his favourite foods, restaurants, tv shows, and toys. Art-making and the process of quickly generating new ideas is instinctual to Herrera: he is prolific, focused, and imaginative.

Bill Lilly (b. 1972) makes work inspired by the music he listens to: “I’m a metalhead and that’s what my art is about.” Like heavy metal, Lilly’s art is a force of technical dexterity, distortion, aggression, masculinity, and raw, unapologetic loudness.

Christianne Msall (b. 1969) is a strong self-advocate, dedicated to both her personal and professional development. Her meticulous graphite and colored pencil drawings are a vibrant marriage of intuitive shapes and symbols inspired by her spirituality: “When I look at my work, I see how happy I am, my positivity. I’m very proud of myself.”

Susan Pasowicz (b. 1955) is a dreamer and visionary. Fascinated by colour, shapes, and organic forms, she uses coloured pencil to create compositions that reflect a dream-like state. Often incorporating windows, doors, or portals, Pasowicz transports the viewer to a new environment: “I usually draw houses, people, curly top trees, clouds, the future. I like watercolors, portals, and rainbows.”

Hubert Posey (b. 1964) uses his art-making process as a tool for connection and communication with others, building multidimensional sculptures from amassed materials collected around the studio. He can often be found laughing as he paints, opening himself up to the world around him and to the community of the studio.

 

LAND

Raquel Albarran (b. 1987) is preoccupied with toes, noses, and encapsulated forms. Her art is full of juxtapositions and playful explorations of life, illness, and objects begging to be squeezed. Albarran’s drawings and sculptures reflect her delightful sense of mischief, humor, and energy. She describes the fantastical and sometimes bizarre pairings in her work as endearing mixes of light and dark, warning viewers that there are “a lot of amputations going on” in upcoming work.

Carlo Daleo (b. 1961) is a talented draftsman, painter, writer, animator, and voiceover artist. He started making art at the age of five following two pop culture tragedies: the unfortunate car accident injuring Jan Berry and the death of Walt Disney. Daleo decided he wanted to continue the legacy of Disney and other cartoonists like Hanna-Barbera and DePatie-Freleng. Daleo’s interests and aesthetic influences are incredibly diverse, including Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, Soupy Sales, New York City cultural institutions, newscasters, and local librarians.

Garrol Gayden (b. 1960) is inspired by a childhood trip to New York City’s historic Coney Island. His saturated images often start with layers of figures, landscapes, and words related to the amusement park. Gayden weaves phrases from his life, family, and fellow studio members between these landmarks, explaining: “I write the things I see, it makes me feel a whole lot better.” His lines are sculptural and bold, alternating from hatch marks to tangled descriptions, a fusion resulting in highly detailed and deeply personal compositions.

Kenya Hanley (b. 1975) has devoted countless hours to assiduously drawing his two great loves: food and reggae musicians. His meticulously organized images, often color coded and labeled, pay homage to the food he grew up eating, the sweets he tries to stay away from, and the music he so lovingly listens to. Hanley is one of LAND’s founding members, and his first book, Tasty Reggae, was published in 2017 by All-You-Can-Eat-Press.

Michael Pellew (b. 1979) is a prolific illustrator and humorist, constantly working on his line of greeting cards, album covers, narrative art books, wooden sculptures, and large drawings. Self-proclaimed “Godfather of Art,” Pellew’s never-ending love affair with pop music and rock-and-roll shows in his comic-style drawings, cassette-tape drawings, and life-sized cut-outs of his favourite musicians, including David Byrne, Alice Cooper, and Michael Jackson.

Byron Smith (b. 1965) makes gentle, celebratory, and intriguing derawings and paintings of women. Sourcing inspiration images from fashion magazines, Smith exaggerates his model’s features. His figures have long, bold, eyelashes, polished nails, and plump, puckered lips. Smith is originally from North Carolina, and now lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

 

Project Onward

Kareem Davis’ elegant graphite drawings focus on the simple and straightforward beauty of buildings that may or may not exist. Davis is a life-long Chicago resident and works full time at both Anitque Taco locations in the city. When he is not drawing skyscrapers, he is rendering images of the CTA L-trains and buses while enthusiastically informing his viewer of the design and function. Most of his drawings contain a small rendering of the sun or moon to show scale.

William Douglas (b. 1967) hails from Knoxville, TN, and draws upon this substantial creative home in his work. Tennessean local artworks based on folk and craft techniques as well as personal and spiritual stories have a special resonance in the artist’s extensive array of objects and images. His compositional strength comes not only from drawing but also from collecting and fusing objects and materials. He explains: “I am inspired by craftspeople in my family – quilt makers, fiddle-makers. I am also inspired by comic books and have made a few of my own. I’m interested in B-movies, reading, science fiction, outer space, nature, and beauty, animals, love, death, color. I get bored unless I’m working with many mediums; I use my intuition and instinct. There is a lot of ugliness in the world, but the ugly can be beautiful.”

David A. Holt (b. 1984) expressed an early interest in music, romance, and celebrities with special mention to any celebrity in the Virgo-Cancer club, being a Virgo himself. Holt’s drawings rely heavily on memory and association, connections running through social media and current events. He turned his attention to obituaries and memorial portraits after the death of his grandmother in 2009. His memorial paintings and drawings are often done in one day, showing Holt’s sense of immediacy and directness.

Ricky Willis (b. 1968) is an architectural historian and sculptor, depicting high-hise apartment buildings, Shell gas stations, CTA buses and trains, and water towers. With simple material and found wood, he recreates these structures from memory with startling elegance, charm, and insight. Willis can pinpoint virtually any building in Chicago and relay when it was built, what building existed before it, and the best bus route to visit it. Contact with real places and locality drive his work: collecting materials for his sculptures during his transit and bicycle commutes, Willis builds objects of the city from the city itself.

 

Visionaries + Voices

Courttney Cooper (b. 1977) draws large, elaborate, and exuberant maps of Cincinnati by hand and from memory. Cooper’s obsessive drawings made on collaged pieces of found paper from his grocery store job map out neighbourhoods in his hometown with remarkable detail. He often walks the streets of the city committing all the places he visits to memory, a process he has been using since he was a child. His maps often address seasonal events, such as the WEBN fireworks, Oktoberfest, or the Taste of Cincinnati. Cooper often goes back into drawings to update them when buildings are newly constructed or torn down.

Jenny Crowe (b. 1985) has loved to fill journals for as long as she or anyone who knows her can remember.  Her fragments of text combine poetry and the mundane in a struggle to find a whole within her experiences.  Crowe’s words are layered to the point that they visually flatten themselves into powerful and immovable forms. Her process is methodical, as she works from left to right and top to bottom, filling the page’s void of empty space until the viewer is trapped somewhere between the impulse to decode text and the desire to enjoy a purely visual experience.

Elmer divides the blank pages of sketchbooks into composed, balanced ratios of space using geometric shapes and color. With simple calculated movements, he applies pencil and then colour to fill some areas and see how they overlap. Elmer approaches portraiture in the same reductionist manner: faces become circles and bodies are condensed to squares. He often draws the same images, and seeing the entirety of them grouped together in the sketchbooks allows us to understand them as daily meditations, as Elmer finds balance and control in his world.

Andrew Hostick (b. 1962) is self-taught and takes as his subjects advertisements and reproductions found in various art magazines including Art in America and Artforum. Hostick inscribes and scores mat board with heavy-handed marks, slowly building up a velvety sheen of coloured pencil in each drawing. The resulting works constitute a beautiful collapse of both primitive and contemporary sensibilities, commenting on the voyeuristic access to an art world which is largely inaccessible to the artist as outsider practitioner.

Trip Huggins comments and memorializes past and current news events of importance. His work is narrative and direct, focusing on moments like the death of President Kennedy, WWII, The Cold War, and stories from the Book of Exodus. Huggins chooses pencil and wax crayon because they look realistic and will often pause between the creation of his pieces for several days, filtering out ideas before settling on the most pressing issue. 

Cathrine Whited writes lists as the first step in her art-making process. She then proceeds to draw each item on the list, with themes like “what’s in my fridge?” She starts her drawings using a ruler to make guidelines in pencil, renders the image and text, then applies coloured pencil before moving to the next item on the list. Her work acts as a vehicle for viewers to isolate, experience, and analyze our collective everyday interactions with the objects and cultures that surround us.


America’s Octoberfest. Zinzinnati. U.S.A.

January 5, 2024 - February 17, 2024

Western Exhibitions is thrilled to present Courttney Cooper’s second solo show at the gallery, America’s Octoberfest. Zinzinnati. U.S.A., featuring exuberant drawings of his hometown. Cooper’s subjective, large-scale aerial-view sub maps of Cincinnati utilize found copier paper, ballpoint pens, and a deep knowledge of the city built upon a lifetime of traveling on city buses, walking downtown, and taking car trips with friends. Hand-drawn from memory over the course of 6 to 12 months, each map bursts with passionate energy, dedicated observation and sly commentary on the only city this 45-year-old has ever lived in. The show opens on Friday, January 5 with a free public reception from 5 to 8pm and runs through February 17.

Rendered in ballpoint pen on stitched-together sheets of paper that Cooper collects from his day job at a local Krogers, his maps are the product of both observation and memory. Cooper often depicts the city in an aerial three-quarter view, meticulously transcribing changes in its architecture and environment based his own encounters around town. These drawings also represent an imaginary layer of the city that only Cooper inhabits, what he calls Zinzinnati USA. In this city, it’s always Oktoberfest — a smorgasbord of revelry in which the cityscape is layered with fantastic imagery and text.

Courttney Cooper’s Cincinnati Map from 2011 was recently acquired by the Museum of Modern Art in New York and he was the subject of a feature in Raw Vision summer 2022. His solo show at Intuit: The Center for Intuit and Outsider Art in Chicago in spring of 2016 was reviewed in artforum.com and New City. His 2-person show (with Cole Carothers) at The Cincinnati Art Museum in 2013 was reviewed in CityBeat and AEQAI and he has exhibited extensively in the Greater Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky area including the Contemporary Art Center and The Carnegie Visual and Performing Arts Center, Covington, KY and is a studio resident at Visionaries + Voices, a non-profit arts organization that provides support for artists with disabilities, offering them professional studio space and that allows them to grow professionally and personally. His work at Western Exhibitions’ booth at the 2017 Outsider Art Fair was lauded in artnet and Brut Force. Cooper is the recipient of a 2015 Wyn Newhouse award and his work is included in a number of private and public collections including Cincinnati Art Museum and Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft.

From Western Exhibitions’ founder, Scott Speh, in a 2016 interview with Artinfo:

I was initially drawn to Courttney’s maps as I grew up in Cincinnati, so I had a personal relationship to imagery. But I think anybody could look at these and, even if they had no idea where Cincinnati even was, they could be awed by the mark marking, the undulations of space, and even the drawings as objects. Collecting papers from work, he glues it together and then folds it over and over so he can carry it wherever he goes, continually adding to it until deeming it finished. The works end up being almost quilt-like, especially as they age. A piece from 2011 has the consistency of an old dollar bill — it’s got this kind of thickness and weight to it, but it’s also soft. We hang the drawings unframed for this reason: they have a sculptural quality, taking on a kind of life of their own once they get on the wall.

One of the things I find fascinating on a formal level — and one of the aspects of his work that remains constant — is his conception of space in a three-quarter view, like an architectural rendering. The buildings have dimensionality to them and it’s almost like if he was like a bird flying over the hill from Northern Kentucky and can behold Cincinnati from that direction. These are works about imagination as much as they are documentation.

Some press accolades:

These works are incredibly layered with texture, description, words, and labyrinths of lines. Staring into the abyss that is Cooper’s work is like getting lost on purpose. — S. Nicole Lane, The Reader, June 2020

He is the surveyor of his own beautiful and idiosyncratic universe, transforming the place he lives into an ongoing atlas of memories and dreams. — Keith Banner, Raw Vision, Summer 2022

The relationship of these moments to each other in space is approximated, as in memory – all of which culminates in a dizzying realm of overlapping information that becomes a living record, adorned generously with nostalgic, commemorative expressions of community and identity.Disparate Minds, September 2016

Cooper’s maps uneasily juxtapose the city’s jubilation and social unrest simultaneously. Each street conjured here questions and fantasizes how men of color like him can survive and thrive in these public, urban spaces. — Matt Morris, Artforum, March 2016

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**Read a review in ARTFORUM here**

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Watch a narrated video walkthrough of the exhibition below:


SPORTS!

September 23, 2023 - December 17, 2023

BEN STONE’s sculptures animate two-dimensional graphics into compelling and uncanny three-dimensional forms. His interest in aberrant human behavior, especially in the context of sports and familial conflicts, manifests as a sincere pursuit of profundity within sloppy, oversimplified imagery; lazy ideas transcend irony, groping towards the tragicomic. For this show, SPORTS!, his first at (northern) Western Exhibitions in Skokie, Illinois, we present a survey of Stone’s athletic-themed work. SPORTS! opens with a free public reception on Saturday, September 23, from 5 to 8pm. Gallery hours at (n)WX are Wednesday to Saturday, 12-6pm and Sundays 12-4pm. The show will be accompanied by an essay from Abraham Ritchie, excerpted in part below.

While Ben Stone’s work has been written about in Artforum, Art in America, and Artnet among many others, he says that being proclaimed the official sculptor of 670 The Score, a Chicago sports radio station, “feels so much more on target for what my interests are.” Stone has a recurring desire to make art that resonates with the everyday experience of people who live their lives going to baseball games or watching the weather forecast. He explains, “there’s some kind of connection to a general, less arty way of thinking maybe that sometimes intrigues me,” describing his making of artwork objects that communicate immediately and simultaneously have a “built in failure.” A connection in Stone’s art to more popularly shared, recognized, and reproduced forms—particularly sports photography and souvenirs—is obviously present. Stone warps these common touch points as they amplify, distort, bend and break, becoming simultaneously familiar and uncanny. Stone is one of the few artists who continually focuses on “sport” as subject matter, exposing and exploring a shared language that is widely spoken and understood, but often ignored in the rarified art world.

In Mary Lou, (1999) the figure of Mary Lou Retton is decontextualized from its source on the Wheaties box, where she was notably the first female athlete featured on the front of the box. In Stone’s figure, the image and pose become strange and take on new readings. Arms raised in victory, Retton ironically sinks into the floor above her waist, forever immobilized after a winning gymnastics routine. Extrapolated from the other associations of the original source on the “Breakfast of Champions” box, Stone reduces Retton’s iconic pose to just a concept: winning.

A series of whimsical wooden sculptures reflect time spent in gymnasiums as Stone coached his daughter’s athletic teams. Based on large-scale banners meant to be seen from a distance, Danny Volleyball (2016) reads as “volleyball” from a distance. But, upon closer inspection, one cannot help but notice the anatomical incongruity of the figure that may have been missed from afar: the figure’s head has somehow completely detached from the body and is now impossibly on the other side of the left arm reaching up for the volleyball. On the other hand, Danny Karate (2016) is only legible through its title for which specific sport it is supposed to be representing. States Stone: “They were probably hung there in the ‘80’s, intending to inspire champions via soft felt, in a realm where so many failed, were picked last and felt bad about unimportant athletic prowess. The clumsiness of the visuals are both funny and sad, just visual metaphors for inevitable failure.”

With each mysterious and humorous object, Stone ponders the condition of unnoticed beauty and delves into the psychology of low self-esteem. One source of inspiration is a crude interpretation of a baseball player used for a dog’s chew toy. In Stone’s painted cast fiberglass sculpture, Benjamin Nimajneb (2013), the two comically distorted figures become permanent adversaries, locked in a poetic struggle.

Stone’s artwork embeds personal memories, and the pieces often act as self-portraits, if not immediately overt ones. Blue Meanies (2010), while depicting an infamous 2002 incident when a father and son duo jumped a short fence at then-Comiskey Park during a White Sox-Royals game and assaulted the Kansas City first base coach, also references Stone’s own dynamic with his father. While using some “pretty poor photos” as the source images for the sculpture, Stone inadvertently ended up carving the first base coach as looking like his own father as a kind of artistic Freudian slip. Stone also sees the pure rage and beautiful futility of this act as a disruption in the system, a ghost in the machine, as if the highly intoxicated White Sox fans, William Ligue and his son, were possessed by a strange energy from an angrier time steeped in Chicago’s darker cultural histories of the thinly veiled policy of segregation of the first Daley administration, the stockyards and Steve Dahl’s infamous disco demolition.

Ben Stone (American, b. 1968) has been included in shows at the Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh; Shane Campbell Gallery, Chicago; The Green Gallery, Milwaukee; ASHES/ASHES, Los Angeles; Regina Rex, NYC; Locust Projects, Miami; Ten in One, NYC; among several others. In 2011 in Art in America, critic Susan Snodgrass wrote that “Stone assumes the role of interlocutor, a champion of an art earnest in all its intentions regardless of its humble origins.” In addition to the publications mentioned above, his work has been discussed on the Bad at Sports podcast and featured on newscasts on several Chicago stations. Stone’s seven-foot tall, 250 pound robot, Nuptron 4000, performed his wedding ceremony in 2004 and has moonlighted as the stand-up comedian, Bernie Circuits, for Club Nutz, in programming for both the Museum of Contemporary Art and the NEXT Art Fair in Chicago. Stone received his BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and his MFA from the University of Illinois-Chicago. He is represented by Western Exhibitions, lives in Berwyn and maintains a studio in Chicago.

Download Abraham Ritchie’s essay on Ben Stone’s SPORTS! here

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This exhibition is presented at Chicago contemporary art gallery Western Exhibitions’ second location, (northern) Western Exhibitions, in Skokie, Illinois. This suburban space expands on the Chicago location’s programming with approximately five specially curated exhibitions a year featuring works by artists from the gallery’s 20-year history. (northern) Western Exhibitions shares a renovated single-floor bow truss building on Skokie’s charming downtown corridor with WHO Modern, a mid-century modern-focused vintage store.

(northern) Western Exhibitions and WHO Modern are located at 7933 N Lincoln Ave, Skokie, IL 60077.
Gallery hours are Wednesday through Saturday 12-6pm, and Sunday, 12-4pm.
For interviews, images, or more information, please contact Scott Speh (312) 480-8390 // scott@westernexhibitions.com

 

 

READ A REVIEW OF SPORTS! IN NEWCITY BY VASIA RIGOU HERE


Visualizing

November 3, 2023 - December 16, 2023

Deb Sokolow’s fifth show with Western Exhibitions, Visualizing, opens with a free public reception at our Chicago location on Friday, November 3, from 5 to 8pm. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm. Sokolow is an artist and writer whose semi-fictitious drawings and books speculate both comically and critically on a number of subjects including architecture, politics, organizational structures and the human psyche. Concurrent with this show, Sokolow’s work will also be on view in the 5th iteration of the Chicago Architecture Biennial, opening to the public at the Chicago Cultural Center on November 2, and in the group show Sightings at the Sun Valley Museum of Art in Idaho, through December 2.

Deb Sokolow’s most recent text-driven, maquette-like drawings visualize ideas in which architecture, design, psychology and social engineering overlap. She envisions scenarios from both an idiosyncratically-designed future and present moment in response to the male-dominated history of architecture described in architecture historian Kenneth Frampton’s 1300-page tome, Modern Architecture, to neurologist Sigmund Freud’s ideas about unconscious desire and to theorist Edward Bernays’ (Freud’s nephew) focus on controlling human behavior for corporate interests.

Also influential to this body of work are the descriptions of wellness cults and cultures in linguist Amanda Montell’s book, Cultish: The Language of Fanaticism, as well as the psychological suppression and mycelia-infested mansion described in author Silvia Moreno-Garcia’s novel, Mexican Gothic. Sokolow’s drawings respond, through a feminist lens, to these sources and focus with humor and criticality on both the spiritual and mental health needs of individuals as well as the potential for social engineering to control built environments (for better or for worse) in an era of increasing climate, economic and social instability.

Sokolow uses narrative, in the form of hand-drafted text in each drawing, to give content and context to the drawing’s visuals which are semi-abstract and often suggest aerial and elevation views of floorplans, the shapes of objects and other diagrammatic elements. Perpendicular dimensional paper tabs protrude from the surface of each drawing’s surface, suggesting walls and other types of boundaries. Some pairings of texts and visuals intentionally don’t quite match up, or they purposefully match up too well in an over-redundant and ridiculous way. Often, something is revealed in the visuals that is not mentioned in the text, and vice versa.

In Gallery 1, Sokolow presents ten large drawings, building on her recent work with the themes discussed above. On display in Gallery 2 are Sokolow’s “thinking drawings,” smaller, palimpsest-like works where ideas and informal, diagrammatic visuals are brainstormed and occasionally crossed-out after being drafted onto the page. These drawings function as a behind-the-scenes, bonus track which can be used as a key to a more in-depth viewing of the formal works presented in Gallery 1. Sokolow cites the 2022 show, Bridget Riley Drawings: From the Artist’s Studio, at the Art Institute of Chicago and The Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 2016 exhibition, Unfinished, as influences.

Deb Sokolow’s (b.1974 Davis, CA) work has been included in the 4th Athens Biennale and in exhibitions at Museum für Gegenwartskunst (Siegen, Germany), Van Abbemuseum (Eindhoven, Netherlands), The Drawing Center (New York), Institute of Contemporary Art (Philadelphia), and Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art (Hartford). Sokolow’s drawings have been reproduced for BOMB Magazine, Best American Comics and in Phaidon’s Vitamin D2. Collections include the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago. She received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute in Chicago and a BFA from the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Sokolow, based in Chicago, is a recipient of an Artadia award, two Illinois Arts Council Agency visual arts fellowships and is on faculty in the department of Art Theory and Practice at Northwestern University.

Download press release here (PDF)

Watch a video walkthrough of the exhibition below:

 

Read a review by Lori Waxman in Hyperallergic: Deb Sokolow’s Wackadoodle World of Design
Read a review by Charles Young in Newcity Art: Technology and Its (Dis)contents: A Review of Deb Sokolow at Western Exhibitions

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The Runner

September 8, 2023 - October 28, 2023

The Runner, a new animated film and project series by Lauren Wy, foregrounds her second solo show at Western Exhibitions. Taking a cue from late 60’s and early 70’s films, especially Le Weekend by Jean-Luc Godard, the animation and its attendant drawings and paintings distill the spirit of fantasy escapism, of running away into a dream. The show opens on Friday, September 8, with a free public reception at our Chicago location from 5 to 8 pm. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 11 am to 6 pm.

Wy’s animated film is a surrealist collage experiment utilizing analog processes with digital tools and altered frame rates to create a time-based pseudo-narrative drawing that embraces a raw provisionality. The short film is presented alongside a series of large-scale drawings and paintings on thin, mechanically flat synthetic surfaces. Inspired by American New Wave cinema and Science Fiction literature, Wy weaves her personal narrative into the collage as a further exploration of the Auto-theory elements present in her recent Autodesire series. The Runner animates saturated dancing color scenes of vintage cars speeding through dream landscapes. A woman character is an archetype, a titan, a goddess, a replicant, a Chimera, shapeshifting from human to animal to machine; from human skin to cheetah running, from feathered bird to Mercedes Benz; always pitched forward in the perpetual forward motion of running.

The Runner is a forgotten tarot card, political riot, outsider angel, animal hybrid, telekinetic, blessed by an infinite alien intelligenceThe Runner rides the hard metal body of a car to and through desire. Long desert roads like the surface of Mars; forests darker than hell. The Runner is always a seeker; they are about seeking. Seeking Tanis, Runner Available. *

Western Exhibitions presented Lauren Wy’s (b. 1987, California) first solo show in 2021, debuting the first five Chapters of her multi-chapter project AUTODESIRE, individual drawings from a massive graphic novel — each presented on two small handmade wood panels, hinged, as to function simultaneously as drawing/sculpture/artist book — depicting an abstracted story of a heroine on a bacchanalian road trip. Chapter 9: Grift X of AUTODESIRE was recently acquired by Castello di Rivoli Museum of Contemporary Art, in Turin, Italy.  Wy has been included in the 6th Athens Biennial in Greece and shown at Castello di Rivoli, Societe Interludio in Turin, Over the Influence in Los Angeles, Kunstraum Walcheturm in Zurich and Apparatus Projects in Chicago. Wy received her MFA from Northwestern University in 2020 and currently lives and works nomadically. 

*Seeking Tanis, Runner Available is a reference to the Tanis Podcast by Terry Miles. The Runner is not affiliated with or represent this podcast.

 

watch a trailer for The Runner below:

 

Watch a narrated video walk-through of the show here:

 

 

Download an enhanced PDF preview at this link
Read a review in Newcity by Vasia Rigou at this link


Memento Vivere

September 8, 2023 - October 28, 2023

Journie Cirdain thinks of the drawing surface as a locus for thought, puns, personal narrative, scraps of information, remembered art history, daydreams, desires and other tangled remnants of everyday life to magically become visual. For Cirdain, drawing is the flower child of art; it’s non-aggressive, laid back, experimental, lascivious, and sometimes deceptive, at least to a less observant person. For her first show at Western Exhibitions, Cirdain combines traditional drawing tropes—still life, observational drawing, even bouquets—with invented images from the subconscious that elucidates her place in the world. The show opens on Friday, September 8 with a free public reception at our Chicago location from 5 to 8pm. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm.

Cirdain’s drawings are materially minimalist, pared down to wood, graphite, and paper. Visually, they explode with a Baroque detail as Cirdain scuffs and cobbles her images together, growing organically. These are notes from the forest, a tongue in cheek psychedelic attempt to mark down the infinite and ineffable way in which all things touch, change and create each other.

Cirdain directs her images by a word, object, or with her actual body, which is placed into the center of the surface like a stone. A wide range of scratches, scribbles, smears, and detailed drawing techniques reveal the system of connections that builds upon a philosophical inquiry about how to live life. For her, drawing elaborates, crosses out, copies, and plays with the art that came before it. Her images are sometimes ironic, sometimes earnest, as Cirdain wrestles with imposed parameters, histories, and situations in her life. Her compositions are contrived together from real life observation, from the memory of the observation, or from the idea that the observation insights. They are then glued together with the myriad and infinite number of details that are specific to her experience and location at the time of making.

These drawings hold a wide-open attitude towards life. Still lives come alive, and the human experience is augmented by otherness. Borrowing from the emotional tenor of a fairy tale, Cirdain’s drawings are sometimes beautiful, sometimes gruesome, and often impossible. Cirdain enjoys taking things one step further. For example, not just a memento mori, but a memento mori which borrows from 600,000 years of human impact on the death and life cycle. She asks questions which are not limited by judgements about what matters or doesn’t. What happens while we sleep? How do flowers experience desire? What is a tree’s perspective of time?

Journie Nikala Cirdain (born 1993, Santa Rosa, California) has shown in exhibitions at The Green Gallery in Milwaukee, Leo Marchutz School in Aix-En-Provence, France and in Illinois at the Elmhurst Art Museum, Bridgeport Art Center and Patient Info. Her work in the 2023 Western Exhibitions Drawing Biennial was written about in Hyperallergic and Chicago Reader and her writing has appeared in Chicago Artist Writers and FNEWS Magazine. Cirdain received an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she was the recipient of the New Artist Society full merit scholarship, and currently lives and works in Chicago, IL.

 

Watch a narrated video walkthrough below:

 

Download an enhanced PDF preview at this link


Mega Meadow Liquidation

June 23, 2023 - August 12, 2023

Ruby T offers paintings that are meditations on the fraught genre of landscape painting through the lens of ecstatic queer earth worship. Mega Meadow Liquidation opens in Gallery 2 at Western Exhibitions, Chicago on June 23 with a free public reception from 5 to 8pm and will run through August 12.

The paintings in this show feature grass, flowers, water, and leaves that float and slip across scraps of marbled silk and beaded tendrils. Some imagery is rendered with a quick and cartooning hand while other moments are slow, observational, and meticulous. Ruby creates her painting surfaces by stitching together and embroidering silk and drop cloth. The effect is a collision of texture, structure, and meaning; not unlike the meadows of the so-called United States, which are both teeming with vibrant plant and animal life, as well as centuries of trauma and dispossession.

Ruby made these paintings during and shortly after a residency at Shandaken, which takes place in a meadow on Lenape land, very close to the home and studio of transcendentalist landscape painter Thomas Cole. Thomas Cole and his romanticist Hudson River School cohort created paintings that served as infrastructure for the nationalist mythology of the United States as “wild,” “untamed,” and “natural” i.e. ripe for colonization. Ruby went to the meadow with a desire to spiritually affirm her non-belonging to that land and redirect her own transcendentalist and earth-loving tendencies toward an inverted, or queer, project of deconstructing Cole’s mythology of landscape painting. Meditations, private performances, and rituals gave way to a tangle of images and stories which she then translated into the works in this exhibition.

In Meadow Composite Wholesale Liquidation Transcendence Blowout, meadows and grasses from the Hudson River Valley and Provincetown stack and dip beyond each others’ borders, zooming in and out of rendering, as Ruby’s fear of losing sight of them (to the dark; to their destruction) makes her paint them more quickly. In Flower Gut System, the artist’s intestines merge with the meadow’s root systems, creating a warped and gnarled digestion system that bulges and shrinks as sea levels rise and super shopping centers continue to liquidate and liquidate so hard that they turn into meadows again and certain flowers and grasses are still deep in the earth, waiting.

This is Ruby T’s second solo show at Western Exhibitions and she has had solo and two-person exhibitions in Chicago at Randy Alexander Gallery, Roots & Culture and The Back Room at Kim’s Corner Food. Group exhibitions and screenings include Hales Gallery in New York; Hyde Park Art Center, Iceberg Projects, Weinberg/ Newton Gallery, Gallery 400, ACRE Projects, and Roman Susan, all in Chicago; and at Monaco in St. Louis. Her work has been written about and reviewed in the Chicago Tribune, Newcity, The Chicago Reader, and Chicago Artist Writers. Ruby T received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2016 and lives and works in Provincetown, Mass.

Check out this recent in-depth article on Ruby T about her and her practice in the Provincetown Independent.
Watch a video walkthrough below:


Somewhere between the eyes and the heart

June 23, 2023 - August 12, 2023

Review in the Chicago Reader

For Somewhere between the Eyes and the Heart, his first solo presentation at Western Exhibitions, Leasho Johnson considers the human condition by rethinking notions of looking and seeing, daring the viewer to contemplate what they know versus how they feel about diverging factors of one’s humanity. In his mixed-medium paintings, often executed on paper and then mounted to canvas, Johnson utilizes the effect of Fragmentation as a methodological foil for disruption and coping with a legacy of violence on the black queer body. Combining charcoal and homemade paints as well as natural dyes, Johnson straddles the line between fluidity and chance, as well as precision and improvisation.

Leasho Johnson refers to his paintings as portraits, though he uses the word ‘portrait’ loosely as these works are not representations of anyone in particular; Johnson uses the “portrait” format to focus on more intimate subjects, a moment, or a memory. For example, Grammazone recalls childhood memories of eavesdropping on his mother’s conversations with her friends, touching on topics of silent violence, and subtle acts of revenge between lovers sometimes because of domestic abuse or cheating, remedied by using this poison. The rhythms of No Wanga Gut, a popular song by the dancehall artist Tiger, are embedded in this painting as admonitions of accepting food from strangers. These childhood memories and moments mark the social anxiety and, at times horror, he remembers from this time.

Free to be constant in my excess is a painting born of a conversation with a colleague regarding tall athletic women and their presence. Fighting back against the American Far-Right’s agenda against trans youths and the so-called ‘woke’ agenda, Johnson ponders how much both masculinity and femininity are bound up in one body and how gender is expressed in the excess of both what is expected and what is performed but never the ideal of either.

Born from layer upon layer of charcoal blended seamlessly with brushy strokes of painted color, Johnson’s matte black silhouettes stand starkly against atmospheric color-fields, as they sample from and interrogate stereotypical notions around blackness and its inhumanity. In a recent interview with Rianna Jade Parker in Frieze, Johnson discussed his striking palette: I want all the colours to be able to merge into black. I think about Blackness as a substance. In terms of space—in terms of being—blackness can be seen as a void. But it’s a void full of potential: there are so many possibilities within that universe. It’s all about a feeling, a mood.

Leasho Johnson (1984, Montego Bay, Jamaica) received a BFA from Edna Manley College in 2009, and an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2020. In fall 2022, Johnson was an artist-in-residence at Fountainhead, Miami. Most recently, his work has been exhibited at Art Gallery of Ontario, Canada; TERN Gallery, Nassau; Harper’s, Los Angeles and East Hampton; Western Exhibitions, Chicago; FLXST Contemporary, Chicago; Suzie Wong Presents, Kingston; National Gallery of Jamaica, Kingston; The Green Gallery, Milwaukee; and National Art Gallery of The Bahamas, Nassau. Johnson’s work has been written about in Frieze, Chicago Magazine, The Miami RailFader, and Caribbean Beat, among other publications. Johnson splits his time between Jamaica and Chicago.

 

Watch a video walkthrough of the show below:


Remastériser

April 28, 2023 - June 17, 2023

For his fourth solo show at Western Exhibitions, Remastériser, Marshall Brown presents collages from three new and ongoing bodies of work.  Brown, an architect and artist, continues his ongoing project to give form to the interactions between architecture and power through acts of world-making. He utilizes the power of collage as a medium that changes the terms of authorship and challenges outdated definitions of originality. In his most recent work Brown dissects images by contemporary architectural photographers and artists who take architecture as their subject, using the historically disruptive properties of collage and montage to create new forms, spaces, and narratives. The show opens on Friday, April 28 with a public reception from 5 to 8pm, and will run through June 17, 2023. Gallery hours are Tuesday to Saturday, 11am to 6pm.

For Remastériser, Brown presents selections from three collage series. Prisons of Invention and Piranesian Maps of Berlin debuted in his survey of collage work at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art [SBMA] in the fall of 2022, foregrounding the conceptual foundations of his explorations at the intersection of architecture and art. The final, and newest series, Forgeries, will be on view for the first time at Western Exhibitions.

The worlds portrayed in the Prisons of Invention series invoke an expanded range of scales, from architectural to urban to landscape, while challenging our experience of gravity, orientation and space-time. Borrowing their name from Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s etching series Carceri d’invenzione (ca. 1749-50), these collages mark a significant increase in scale and complexity, creating immersive visions reminiscent of the Italian master’s multilayered imaginary prisons. The enlargement process requires seams to be used both within and between image fragments. Artist’s tape for temporary positioning is not removed but remains as part of the work, and the source material comes entirely from a select group of photographers working on architecture, urbanism, and landscape at the beginning of the 21st century.

Recalling Piranesi’s map of the Campus Martius (1762) and the map of Rome, created with Giambattista Nolli (1748), Marshall Brown’s large (96 x 72 inches), multi-paneled collage Piranesian Map of Berlin, ca. 1800-1690 exists at the intersection of reality and uncertainty, portraying cities that could have been or others that might yet be. The source material is a series of technical documents created by the Berlin Senate Department for Urban Development and Environmental Protection in 1986, shortly before the city’s unification. Here Brown is investigating how urban plans project order by abstracting urban reality, reveling in the precision and beauty of maps to reassure us that we know enough to continue building in the face of constant uncertainty. James Glisson, curator at the SBMA, states in the catalog for Brown’s show there, “both Piranesi and Brown take maps as forums for dreaming and imagining, sheets of paper transformed by the artist’s willful intervention. Neither, however, creates maps of mythical realms, alien planets, or an Earth centuries hence. Their dreaming is circumscribed by history and its manifestations in the built environment.”

The Forgeries are Brown’s newest body of work that responds directly to contemporary art’s portrayals of architecture.  In these pieces, Brown dismantles photographs by several contemporary artists and reassembles them to create collages that borrow pictorial strategies from the early modern architect and prolific collagist, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.  The Forgeries play a double game. Brown retools Mies’ pictorial flatland as a mirror to reflect contemporary art’s gaze back on itself and constructs new spaces that subvert our attempts to separate the two creative worlds of architecture and art.

Marshall Brown is an artist and architect whose work creates new connections, associations, and meanings among disconnected architectural and urban remnants. His 2022-23 show, The Architecture of Collage at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, was Brown’s first solo museum exhibition and the most comprehensive presentation of his collages to date. Brown’s work is held in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Arkansas, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Contemporary Photography and the University Club, both in Chicago. Brown has exhibited at the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale, the 2017 Chicago Architecture Biennial, the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, The Arts Club of Chicago, the Architecture and Design Museum Los Angeles, and in a 10-year survey, Recurrent Visions: The Architecture of Marshall Brown Projects, at the Princeton University School of Architecture. Marshall Brown received his masters’ degrees at Harvard University. He is an associate professor with tenure at the Princeton University School of Architecture, where he directs the Princeton Urban Imagination Center. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.

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The show has been written up …
in Musée Magazine here
in the Chicago Reader here
and in NewCity Design here