G-module
Paris
15, rue Debelleyme
01 42711475 FAX 01 42711467
WEB
Two solo shows
dal 2/4/2003 al 17/5/2003
01 42711475 FAX 01 42711467
WEB
Segnalato da

Jeff Gleich


approfondimenti

Marsha Cottrell
Alan Wiener



 
calendario eventi  :: 




2/4/2003

Two solo shows

G-module, Paris

Solo exhibitions by New Yorkers Marsha Cottrell (drawing) and Alan Wiener (sculpture).


comunicato stampa

Marsha Cottrell (drawing) and Alan Wiener (sculpture)

g-module will present, for the first time in France, solo exhibitions by New Yorkers Marsha Cottrell (drawing) and Alan Wiener (sculpture). Drawing by way of the computer, Marsha Cottrell continues her project expanding its meaning. In the approximately seven recent works to be exhibited at g-module, Marsha Cottrell's minuscule, yet monumental mark making coalesces onto sheets of paper both small and large. Beginning working via computer in the mid-90s, when mouse clicks and cyber navigation began to replace the pen and pencil in everyday life, Cottrell founded a visual strategy of orchestrating keyboard characters that were once only meant to appear within the lines of grammar.
Commas, parentheses, brackets, etc, sometimes contorted or stretched, invigorate the picture plane, plotting a fresh milieu of expression. The marks sum up to thousands, alluding to some infinite field of magnetic particles in space or to aerial views of futuristic cityscapes on some gravity supported surface. Still, in these full force abstract atmospheres, Cottrell generates a gathering of pauses, stops and elucidating characteristics of punctuation to expand the meaning -or meaningless- realm of language, be that prose or poetry. Cottrell's recent exhibitions include Out of Memory at Henry Urbach Architecture in New York. She has exhibited in museums such as The Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York and the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, Wisconsin. She is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships including the Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation, MacDowell Fellowship and the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. She received her MFA in 1990 at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and is living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Alan Wiener's exhibition at g-module will consist of recent works created in Paris during his residency at Cité des Arts early this year, as well as several from New York completed during the past year. Wiener has an idea of a form in his mind: the perfect one. According to Wiener, the block form is the most basic structure seldom found in nature; most likely indicating a human presence. In his current process, he sculpts with a material similar to plaster of Paris known as hydrocal. In its liquid state, it is poured, causing puddles that eventually harden after its duel with gravity and shape-shifting.
The idea of the block shape is thus transformed into an organic, rhythmic and strangely seductive entity of natural condition. The crossing of smooth and rough surfaces, along with dozens of little nodes or appendages, suggests that it could potentially be something either making or even unmaking itself. These works, of certain architectural mindset, indicate a symbolic gesture of great perfection, whether itself made by humans, made by nature or both. Alan Wiener's recent exhibitions include Feature Inc, New York City, Socrates Sculpture Park, Queens, New York and Ace Gallery, New York City. He is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships including the Cité des Arts Residency, Paris, The John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and The MacDowell Fellowship. He received his MFA in 1993 from the Tyler School of Art, Elkins Park, PA and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

Image: Marsha Cottrel, Untitled (detail), 2002, impression laser a tirage unique

Hours: 12:00-19:00, Wednesday through Saturday.

g-module
15, rue Debelleyme (corner rue de Poitou) in the Marais Paris
t 01 42711475
f 01 42711467

IN ARCHIVIO [11]
Carl D'Alvia
dal 16/3/2007 al 27/4/2007

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