Saturday, September 20, 2014

Second Family by Julie Torres


SECOND FAMILY

Curated by Julie Torres
Family Style Collective
2 Rivington Street (btwn Bowery/Chrystie)
LES, NYC 10002
Opening Reception: Wednesday September 24, 6-9pm
On view: Thursday - Sunday, 12-6pm, through September 28
Closing Party: Sunday September 28, 3-6pm

Featuring:

Liz Ainslie, Julie Alexander, Meg Atkinson, Polina Barskaya, Emily Berger, Kristen Biles, Caetlynn Juniper Booth, Melissa Capasso, Susan Carr, Jake Cartwright, Maanik Singh Chauhan, Lauren Collings, Jonathan Cowan, William Crump, Terry Ekasala, Georgia Elrod, Sessa Englund, Ryan Michael Ford, MaDora Frey, Barbara Friedman, Justine Frischmann, Daniel John Gadd, Kyle Gallup, Enrico Gomez, Rachael Gorchov, Julie S. Graham, Alexis Granwell, Fred Gutzeit, Elizabeth Gourlay, Levi Haske, Jay Henderson, Robert Hickman, Pete Hust, Will Hutnick, John Kesling, Wendy Klemperer, Barbara Laube, William Lawler, Geddes Levenson, JJ Manford, Eric Mavko, Leeza Meksin, Joan Mellon, David T Miller, Katherine Mojzsis, Christopher Moss, Seth Mulvey, Helen O'Leary, Fran O'Neill, Jamie Powell, Allie Rex, Diane Dwyer, Elizabeth Riley, Russell Roberts, Christopher Rose, Anne Russinof, Cecilia Salama, Julia Schwartz, Vicki Sher, Polly Shindler, Karen Schiff, Greg Singer, Marian Brunn Smith, Elisa Soliven, Melissa Staiger, Maxwell Stevens, Christina Tenaglia, Polixeni Theodorou, Claudia Tienan, Patrick Todd, Jill Vasileff, Kati Vilim, Zak Vreeland, Albert Weaver, Suhee Wooh and Becky Yazdan.

Press for 'Family Style' is here.

Saturday, September 6, 2014

Benjamin King: Simple Mountain @ Arts + Leisure




There was a long period of searching for a something in color which I then called “a condition of light”.  It applied to all objects in nature, flowers, trees, people, apples, cows.  These all have their certain condition of light, which establishes them to the eye, to each other, and to the understanding.

To understand that clearly go to nature, or to the Museum of Natural History and see the butterflies. Each has its own orange, blue, black; white, yellow, brown, green, and black, all carefully chosen to fit the character of the life going on in that individual entity.
- Arthur Dove, 1930, reprinted in Modern American Painters.
 

Benjamin King: Simple Mountain
@
Arts+Leisure
1571 Lexington Avenue
New York, NY 10029

Opening: Saturday, September 6th, 7-10pm 


Arts+Leisure is pleased to present its first project with Benjamin King,Simple Mountain.  This new group of paintings and sculpture, accompanied by a limited edition book of the same title, exemplifies the artist’s long-term quest to distill the natural world into its essentials, and thereby create a new way of looking at nature through painting, and according to a new set of rules and codes.  Picking up where the symbolist and abstract expressionist Arthur Dove and his peers left off, King explores a very personal landscape and vocabulary which appears to be a result of long hours contemplating nature through his own existential beliefs and philosophy. 


King writes:
My process is dependent both on having direct experiences with nature and then recalling those experiences from a point of remove. I'm interested in a cognitive dissonance that arises from this translation. Making this work is like trying to recall a memory where the majority of the visual detail and narrative have been lost or obscured, but for some reason the memory is still there. I am trying to capture that compression of images and sensations retained by the mind. The meaning of the work relies not on one single condition or reading, but on our ability to effortlessly process a confluence of meanings generated by the same piece. 

 
These pictures seem to fail as landscapes, while succeeding as abstractions, yet inextricably remain landscapes. Or maybe they walk a line that removes them from both categories. The physicality of the surface and the cartoon-like simplification of the imagery undermines seeing the work as only a landscape painting. Brushstrokes and textures mimic the feeling of nature more than they literally describe it. It is like there are two separate systems of logic at work in these paintings. One defines it in terms of familiar symbols for nature and the landscape and another abstract logic seems connected to an intuitive sensibility.


The show is at once both uncomplicated and mysterious.  He portrays basic elements in nature - rivers, sky, trees, rocks - with fresh eyes but with an ancient sensibility. The work is refreshingly pure and organic and tactile via his use of materials, and in many ways runs crosscurrent against the current fashion of digital and social media.  These works seem directed at only one person, rather than millions, yet they are also universal.  Whatever truths are inherent in these unique paintings require some careful observation and contemplation on the part of the viewer, similar to the artist’s own process.  Arts+Leisure invites the public to take part in this meditation this September.

Benjamin King lives and works in New York City. He studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and received his MFA from the University of Chicago. In 1999 in Umbria, Italy he met and studied with artist and professor Nicolas Carone, with whom the notion of art as metaphysical study had a strong effect on the direction of his work. King's work has been exhibited internationally in galleries including Longhouse Projects, ACME, Galerie Laroche/Joncas, Ridgway Exhibitions, Dvorak Sec and The Painting Center. In 2011 in the Canadian art journal Border Crossings, artist-writer-curator Cameron Skene wrote about Benjamin King's work, "King's are deceptively simple paintings, and the comparison to both Phillip Guston and the early-century Arthur Dove is hard to avoid. He's has a sharp eye for the rules of paint, not unlike Dove who said, 'we cannot express the light in nature because we have no sun. We can only express the light we have in ourselves.'" In 2009 in New York City with artist Jay Henderson he formed the roaming curatorial project HKJB. This work has resulted in eight group exhibitions in New York City, Montreal, and Mexico City. HKJB also publishes a blog called HKJBlog with permanent contributors reporting on visual arts in New York City and Los Angeles. HKJB was included in the 2010 Exit Art exhibition and 2012 art history text Alternative Histories New York Art Spaces 1960-2010, published by MIT Press. In 2011, King, with artist Rob Nadeau, curated the group exhibition Snowclones for Joshua Abelow's ARTBLOGARTBLOG pop-up show series held in Ross Bleckner's Chelsea New York studio. 


An 80-page full color artist limited edition will be available for purchase as well. For more information please contact nick@artsandleisure.net or call 917-880-7299.
 

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Joshua Smith: The Blue Album @ Essex Flowers


Joshua Smith: The Blue Album
@
Essex Flowers
365 Grand St. @ Essex / NYC


Opening: September 5th, 2014


September 5 - October 5


Watch the press release here.

Rachael Gorchov @ TSA Bushwick




Rachael Gorchov: Making Strange September 12 - October 19





Opening Reception: Friday, September 12 7-10 PM




TSA Gallery
44 Stewart Ave, #49

Brooklyn NY 11237

TSA is pleased to present Making Strange, an exhibition of recent work by Rachael Gorchov.

The entry point to this work is the landscape of suburban, semi-public spaces: lawns, ponds, skies and flora, planned and invasive, that surround office and industrial complexes. Gorchov paints these elements with varying degrees of specificity, allowing image to collide, dissolve into and be convoluted by painterly gestural abstraction. The paint inhabits geometric and organic three-dimensional forms that hang on the wall, inviting gravity to a wrestling match with balance. The forms work in concert to frame and obscure, defamiliarizing omnipresent, ordinary environments.

After drawing and photographing onsite at commercial parks both inhabited and abandoned, Gorchov constructs conglomerated landscapes in her studio. Her aim is to highlight that which is hidden in plain view: the idiosyncratic, romantic, picturesque, calming, ominous, daydreamy, imaginary and secret. If you choose to spend time with these paintings, they will ask you to explore by walking around, ducking, tilting your head, craning your neck. The structures may be reminiscent of other things, the paint may accentuate or distract from the form for a disorienting experience, thus “making strange” – a translation of the term, coined by Russian Formalist Viktor Shklovsky, ostranenie: an artistic device to “impart the sensation of things as they are perceived and not as they are known.” By slowing the act of perception, the familiar is made new and unusual.

Hours: Saturdays and Sundays 12pm-6pm and by appointment.
Ring buzzer to enter during normal hours
To read the full press release and for directions, please visit
http://newyork.tigerstrikesasteroid.com/.