A curated show with a title and theme triggered by a recently released (solo) 'album' by David Sherry, with works by Nina Canell, Atsushi Kaga, Matt Sheridan Smith and David Sherry.
I love those paintings; is a curated show with a title and theme
triggered by a recently released (solo) ‘album’ by David Sherry.
The resultant (group) exhibition features works by four artists; Nina
Canell, Atsushi Kaga, Matt Sheridan Smith and David Sherry, that while
discussing diversified approaches to art practice, perversely covers
pretty-much all other media, bar painting. Rather, it looks at the
nature of assembled meaning, by exploring alternative approaches to
art-making, both concrete and ephemeral, that employ applications of
natural and social science 1 to investigate methodologies, formal
systems and social patterns. The art of exhibition curation (itself,
as an assemblage), is extended by the fact that all the works have
been originally made for other international specific purposes, but
have never been exhibited together, nor exhibited in Ireland.
Similarly, while all the artists are represented by mother’s
tankstation, three should be familiar to the Dublin audience but it
introduces a serious inclusion of the practice of Matt Sheridan Smith,
who lives and works in New York and has recently joined the gallery.
David Sherry’s inspiring – in more ways than one – and
eponymous, audio artwork, constitutes the form of an old-fashioned
musical, ‘concept album’, but is, in fact, a limited edition CD
(more in the nature of a small, boutique print edition). Taking a seat
in the armchair, installed in the lounge area of the gallery, and by
selecting track six, the viewer/listener receives a carefully reported
assemblage of remarks made to the artist, by exterior observers, about
the artist’s own art practice. While essentially personal and
particular, the work uses a dead-pan and objective voice to speak
universally about the gap between the production and reception of art,
between intended meaning and perceived understanding. Without the
slightest audible suggestion of irony or pejorative emotion, Sherry
quantitatively tests the observations, clinically laying-out each
comment – on an imaginary workbench – in an experimental (and
achingly funny) search for verification or apparent truth. Sherry has
made a series of drawings to accompany the individual album tracks
online (see www. flawedcore.bandcamp.com/album/i-love-those-paintings)
and the originals are installed in the gatefold of the gallery.
In her video/sculpture, We lost wind, (2007), Nina Canell (in
collaboration with Robin Watkins) takes a number of natural
‘givens’ of mathematics and logic; a forest, a dead tree, and a
human presence, both seen and audibly expressed by the use of
essential breath. The lone figure, dressed against the cold, stands in
an otherwise de-populated forest. Unexpectedly, he breathes life into
a saxophone embedded into the truck of the hollow tree. The plaintive
sound is quietly tested with small breaths and then powerfully
amplified by the tree to the entire surroundings, the forest, and by
the extension of a powered speaker, to the gallery. The work evokes
the rudiments of universal language; a broadcast mating call, a
warning of danger or a cry for help.
Atsushi Kaga’s interlacing anthropomorphic symbolism flows so
seamlessly from one work to another, that a clear understanding of his
intent is almost impossible from viewing a single piece, which alone,
can give a misleading sense of ‘Japanimation’ cuteness or Kawaii
(可愛い). Quite the opposite is true; while cased in terms of highly
inventive imagistic and literary storytelling, Kaga’s work as a whole
confronts complex and very human sociological concerns of identity and
identification, not to mention love, loss and isolation. Kaga’s cast
of characters, or avatars appear repeatedly throughout his in drawings
and sculptures, but it is only in the animations that their particular
meanings and purposes emerge. Factory, (2009) elucidates the
characters of the Preztel Men who have been present for some time in
Kaga’s work, yet enigmatically elusive in respect of his conceptual
intention. The opening sequence reveals a clearing with a distant
factory, evidently transporting the viewer to an unspecified natural
Asian environment, encroached and threatened by the works of man. “No
moustache, No work!” declares the notice over the factory door,
beyond which all individuals have blended-in to become ‘Pretzel
Men’.
The work of Matt Sheridan Smith, oscillates between readymade kits,
and the wreckage of elementary syntaxes and visual alphabets. The
assembled constituents in this exhibition contribute towards what he
has described as a form of experimental portraiture that ostensibly
presents itself as so many still lives. The portrait ‘subject’, in
this instance the celebrated Royal Air Force pilot and lower-limb
amputee, Douglas Bader, is both crucial and yet unimportant or de-
centralized to/from the overall understanding of the works and
Sheridan Smith’s greater purpose. More to the point is the series of
‘things’, with their accrued injuries, accidents, cuts and markings
that collectively contribute towards a narrative that we may
understand in a linear fashion, although it may be devoid of, or
misaligned to, anything that actually resembles truth or history but
happily runs as a narrative that exists on its own terms.
1 The natural sciences are branches of science that seek to elucidate
the rules that govern the natural world by using (principally a
priori) scientific methods. The term "natural science" is used to
distinguish the subject matter from the social sciences, an umbrella
term, which applies the scientific method to study human behaviour and
social patterns; the humanities, which use a critical or analytical
approach to study the human condition; and the formal sciences.
For more information or images please contact: Finola Jones or Anne
Lynott at mother’s tankstation. 41-43 Watling Street, Ushers Island,
Dublin 8. Ireland. T: +353 1 6717654
gallery@motherstankstation.com www.motherstankstation.com
Opening April 11
Mother's Tankstation
41-43 Watling Street (Ushers Island) - Dublin
Hours: thursdays to saturdays: 12.00 noon to 6.00pm
other times by appointment
Free admission