Each of these artists, Ruth Claxton, Amy Cutler, and Runa Islam, creates precisely rendered, yet enigmatic compositions that exhibit a self-conscious awareness of the formal structures respective mediums of sculpture, painting and film. Although the exhibitions were developed distinct, the juxtaposition of these artists' works reveals a strong visual resonance. Their interest in form, color, line, phenomenological engagement.
These exhibitions were organized by Laura Steward, former Phillips Director and Janet Dees,
Assistant Curator.
SITE Santa Fe is pleased to present three solo exhibitions by the artists Ruth Claxton, Amy
Cutler, and Runa Islam from February 5 - May 15, 2011. There will be a media preview and
walkthrough with the artists on Thursday, February 3, 11 am. The free public opening is Friday,
February 4, from 5–7 pm.
Each of these artists, Ruth Claxton, Amy Cutler, and Runa Islam, creates precisely rendered,
yet enigmatic compositions that exhibit a self-conscious awareness of the formal structures
respective mediums of sculpture, painting and film. Although the exhibitions were developed
distinct, the juxtaposition of these artists’ works reveals a strong visual resonance. Their
interest in form, color, line, phenomenological engagement, and, in some cases, the employment of similar motifs, creates a suggestive visual conversation.
Ruth Claxton creates dynamic sculptural
environments that employ a diverse range of
tactics to question perception. Claxton assembles
large, elaborate, multi-dimensional structures from
metal hoops, circular mirrors, and colored glass
disks. These structures are site-responsive and
simultaneously serve to construct the viewer’s
interaction with the exhibition space and provide
an environment for the figurines nestled within
them. The multiple reflective surfaces engender an
instability that belies the sturdy metal structures that
support them.
Claxton seeks out collectible porcelain figurines that are common in many English homes. These tiny
sculptures depict a variety of leisure related subjects from birds to ballerinas; some appear to have
stepped out of 18th century paintings of fêtes galantes. Through the application of beads, buttons,
sequins, ribbons, blown glass, and other materials, Claxton eradicates the figures’ sight. The choice
of materials makes this blinding playful rather than sinister, and Claxton purports that the figures
portrayed are enraptured, not traumatized by their interrupted vision. This sense of disorientation is
increased when the figurines are placed within Claxton’s maze-like structures.
Claxton is creating a new room-sized installation in one of SITE’s 4,000 square foot galleries for this
exhibition, the artist’s first solo show in the United States. This work, Synthetic Worlds, represents
an expansion of the artist’s current experiments with larger scale. This installation will cascade from
the ceiling, activating the entire gallery space.
Claxton has had solo shows at Spike Island (Bristol, UK) and Ikon Gallery (Birmingham, UK) and
work included in Undone, Henry Moore Institute (Leeds, UK), Rework-remodel, National Glass
Centre (Sunderland, UK) and Known Unknowns, Gallery Loop (Seoul, Korea). She recently
completed a major public commission in Weston Supermare, UK. She is one of the founding
directors of Eastside Projects and lives and works in Birmingham (UK).
Amy Cutler’s meticulously rendered paintings
on paper conjure unusual worlds predominantly
inhabited by women. The women who populate
Cutler’s paintings are often similarly dressed
and engaged in enigmatic activities such as
mending tigers or awkwardly carrying mysterious
loads through semi-bucolic landscapes. Though
they seem to invoke fantasy worlds, Cutler’s
compositions are grounded in the exploration of
interior states and are inspired by the complex web
of emotions generated by real-life situations.
Cutler’s compositions are often concentrated against a stark white background, which imbues them
with a sense of timelessness and indeterminacy of place. This ambiguity is heightened by Cutler’s
embrace of a variety of visual references including Indian miniature paintings, US Army manuals, and
the costumes and textiles of diverse cultures and time periods, which she depicts with great detail
and specificity. For Cutler, the non-communicative expressions worn by her characters are indicative
of their inward looking nature. Her women are engaged in self-examination and self-reflection of
which the entire composition becomes a metaphor.
SITE’s exhibition brings together an exemplary selection of over twenty works created during the last
decade by the artist, many lent by private collections around the country.
Cutler participated in the 2004 Whitney Biennial and has had solo exhibitions at the Museo Nacional
Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid and the Indianapolis Museum of Art, among others. Her works
are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, Whitney Museum of American Art
and the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
For more than a decade, Runa Islam has created
16mm and 35mm films and film-based installations
that are generated from an interest in avant-garde film
history, theories, and structures of filmmaking. Islam
constructs poetic compositions that exhibit a precise
attention to formal details and an open narrative
structure. Her works are presented in carefully crafted
installations and configurations that foreground an
interest in the apparatus of film-viewing experience.
More often than not, Islam presents her works on
film, rather than as digital transfers, highlighting the
importance of the medium for her practice.
For her exhibition at SITE, Islam will present three works created within the last ten years: How Far
to Fårö (2004-2005), What is a Thought Experiment, Anyhow? (2007), and The Restless Subject
(2008). This selection includes single, two and three-channel projections and points to Islam’s
dialogue with the history of moving image devices and work of avant garde film directors. These
works engage in a cohesive visual dialogue while showcasing the variety of Islam’s practice.
Runa Islam’s work was included in the 2005 Venice Biennial and the 2003 Istanbul Biennial,
and she has had solo exhibitions at UCLA’s Hammer Museum, the Serpentine Gallery, London, the
Musée D’Art Contemporain de Montréal, and Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney among others.
Islam lives and works in London.
Image: Runa Islam, What Is A Thought Experiment, Anyhow? 2005-2006, 16mm colour films (non-synchronized two screen projection), optical sound, 9 minutes 55 seconds. Production image © the artist. Courtesy the artist and White Cube
Press Contact: Anne Wrinkle
wrinkle@sitesantafe.org tel. 505.989.1199.
Public Opening: Friday, February 4, 5–7 pm
SITE Santa Fe is located at 1606 Paseo de Peralta, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87501.
Hours: Thursday and Saturday, 10 AM–5 PM; Friday, 10 AM–7 PM; Sunday, 12 PM–5 PM; closed Monday-Wednesday. The museum is open on Wednesday, 10 am – 5 pm in summer.
Museum admission is $10 for adults and $5 for students, teachers, and seniors; members are free. Free admission is offered on Fridays, made possible by a grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc., of Houston.
Tours by SITE Guides are available free of charge to the public and are also regularly scheduled on Fridays at 6 pm, and
Saturdays & Sundays at 2 pm.