Galleri Nicolai Wallner
Copenhagen
Ny Carlsberg Vej 68
+45 32570970 FAX +45 32570971
WEB
Jonathan Monk
dal 1/9/2011 al 14/10/2011
Tues-Fri 12 - 5 pm, Sat 12 - 3 pm

Segnalato da

Galleri Nicolai Wallner


approfondimenti

Jonathan Monk



 
calendario eventi  :: 




1/9/2011

Jonathan Monk

Galleri Nicolai Wallner, Copenhagen

World Time Clock and Used Cars: two exhibitions with new works. Challenging the notions of originality and authorship still present in art, Monk's work suggests ways of rethinking both the traditional role of the artist and the creative process in general. Through his artistic career he has paired a conceptual approach with a wry wit and a certain down-to-earth sensibility.


comunicato stampa

It is a great pleasure for Galleri Nicolai Wallner to present: "World Time Clock and Used Cars", two exhibitions with new works by Jonathan Monk.

Jonathan Monk consistently recasts or extends conceptual art's most emblematic strategies - ideas over object making, the dematerialization of the art object, and serialization. Challenging the notions of originality and authorship still present in art, Monk's work suggests ways of rethinking both the traditional role of the artist and the creative process in general. Through his artistic career he has paired a conceptual approach with a wry wit and a certain down-to-earth sensibility.

A series of neons, Used Cars inhabit one of the exhibition rooms. The works are priced and titled according to various used cars being sold in the local newspaper. The possibility of either acquiring a car or an art piece – choosing between the satisfaction of practical needs or aesthetic fulfillment - cleverly reflects our notions about art, its status, appearance and market value.

Similarly employing the idea of the handed down object two pairs of grandfather clocks beat in and out of synch. Their humanlike shapes suggest two people eyeing each other. The sound of the clock poetically address childhood memories of visiting your grandparents coupled with a classic feeling of Memento mori.

The concept of time is further underlined by a number of circular One Minute paintings inspired by the thoughts of UK artist John Latham (1921-2006). Latham searched all his life for a single theory that could encompass the different biological and psychological aspects of life, and seemingly found it in the idea of flat time which he visualized by a single burst of spray paint. Perhaps a more realistic vision of a system to unify the world is presented through a series of maps: Map of the World in Handkerchiefs, Map of the World in Black Leather, and Map of the World in Work Wear. With the national states reduced to specific pieces of clothing Monk rather humorously suggests another way of bringing us together.

Recent solo museum exhibitions include "Time Between Spaces", Palais de Tokyo and Musée d'art Moderne (Paris) and the travelling exhibition "Yesterday, Today, Tomorrow, etc.", Kunstverein Hannover (Hannover), Kunstmuseum St. Gallen (St. Gallen), Kunsthalle Nürnberg (Nürnberg), and Haus am Waldsee (Berlin).

Monk is represented in numerous public collections including Museum of Modern Art (New York), Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York), Tate Britain (London), Moderna Museet (Stockholm), and The National Gallery of Denmark (Copenhagen).

Image: Jonathan Monk: Used Car (Fiat 500 L 1967, DKK 69.000), 2011
Turquoise neon lettering, installation size: 32,5 x 38 x 5 cm, unique

Galleri Nicolai Wallner
Ny Carlsberg Vej 68, OG 1760 Copenhagen
Opening Hours: Tues-Fri 12 - 5 pm, Sat 12 - 3 pm
Admission: free

IN ARCHIVIO [6]
Alicja Kwade
dal 22/5/2014 al 21/6/2014

Attiva la tua LINEA DIRETTA con questa sede