Pacific Design Center - PDC
Los Angeles
8687 Melrose Avenue (West Hollywood)
213 6211741 FAX 213 6208674
WEB
Amanda Ross-Ho
dal 21/6/2012 al 22/9/2012
tue-fri 11am-5pm, sat-sun 11am-6pm

Segnalato da

Lyn Winter


approfondimenti

Amanda Ross-Ho



 
calendario eventi  :: 




21/6/2012

Amanda Ross-Ho

Pacific Design Center - PDC, Los Angeles

TEENY TINY WOMAN. The exhibition presents her ongoing engagement with translation, scale, and the authored collapse of authentic and performed gestures, combining large-scale paintings, fabricated objects, textiles, and photographs within a custom architectural environment.


comunicato stampa

curated by Rebecca Morse

Los Angeles—The Museum of Contemporary Art presents AMANDA ROSS-HO: TEENY TINY WOMAN, on view at MOCA Pacific Design Center from June 23 through September 23, 2012. Amanda Ross-Ho is one of the leading Los Angeles artists of her generation and this new installation is her largest and most ambitious exhibition to date. Created specifically for the MOCA Pacific Design Center, TEENY TINY WOMAN presents her ongoing engagement with translation, scale, and the authored collapse of authentic and performed gestures, combining large-scale paintings, fabricated objects, textiles, and photographs within a custom architectural environment. Multiple forms explore and advance her relationship with the metaphorical potential of photography.

“Amanda Ross-Ho has established a unique vocabulary of images and objects that gains momentum through complex iterations. This exhibition, and accompanying publication, offer a window into Ross-Ho’s language—past and present—with an eye toward the future,” said MOCA Associate Curator Rebecca Morse.

For almost a decade, Ross-Ho has engineered an elaborate set of conceptual and formal operations that guide her art-making practice. These methodical procedures allow her to navigate her immediate surroundings, namely the incessant fluctuation of popular and unpopular visual cultures and their direct points of connection to personal and universal truths. The result is a specific and consistently evolving personal language, with which Ross-Ho constructs carefully articulated poetic environments.

Ross-Ho’s work often originates from observations of her own movements within a designated space; she regularly investigates the studio itself as a fertile site for identifying potential in generative and reflexive processes. Although her process is rooted in immediacy and chance, it is executed with precise intentionality. Within this highly sensitized approach, authentically haphazard formal gestures are placed under careful scrutiny, and systematically choreographed in subsequent iterations. Ross-Ho’s work does not terminate in completed forms, but gains meaning through an exponential accumulation of contexts. Within the structure of each work is an embedded life cycle, mapping an organic trajectory that leads from conception through reception in its various aggregating forms.

AMANDA ROSS-HO: TEENY TINY WOMAN will transform the MOCA Pacific Design Center space via a massive looping architectural exchange. The exhibition includes 17 wall panels, collectively equivalent to the exact interior measurements of her downtown L.A. studio, which were built onsite in the exhibition space and then transferred to her studio space. For an extended time, they accumulated the genuine residue of production, acting as literal stages for a series of hyperbolic, choreographed maneuvers borrowed from daily studio activity. For the exhibition, the walls will be returned to the museum, creating an architectural lining on which to present a connective system of discreet works—paintings, objects, and textiles—compounded in an address of translation, scale, and nested opposition. Each wall, based on the proportions of a sheet of paper, acts as a museum-scale page on which to present a non-linear flux of data, taxonomical arrangements, and explicitly authored compositions.

The centerpiece of the exhibition is a fabricated sculpture based on a ’60s-model photo enlarger belonging to Ross-Ho’s father. A deeply personal artifact, as well as a once common apparatus in the production of pictures, the sculpture is the newest work in Ross-Ho’s ongoing series of fabricated objects, and functions as key to the logic of the surrounding elements in the show. The piece serves as a monument to a method of seeing through negotiations of positive and negative spaces, shifts in scale, and imaging through translation—maneuvers that have become signature concerns in Ross-Ho’s work. The retroactive gaze initiated by revisiting this vintage object defines the broad territory established within the exhibition. Ross-Ho engages a wide range of immediate and historical points of view, in a far-reaching examination of both the autobiographical and the public domains.

In part initiated by the notion of a ‘survey’ exhibition, Ross-Ho directly embraces the full gamut of her own creative history—from her earliest primal expressions through her recent sophisticated forms— tracing the evolution of her aesthetic language in a reinterpretation of the broad project of summarizing one’s ‘life’s work.’ Also included is the diptych UNTITLED ONE and UNTITLED TWO, a pair of large-scale paintings that are direct translations of works made by the artist at age four. By painstakingly and deliberately recreating intuitive marks made by her own hand 33 years prior, Ross- Ho investigates the potential of memory located in both experience and muscle, creating a looping connection between these new works and the deep origins of her art practice.

The exhibition is curated by MOCA Associate Curator Rebecca Morse and will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. The most detailed appraisal of Ross-Ho’s oeuvre to date, the book includes an essay by Morse, an interview between Ross-Ho and MIT List Visual Arts Center Curator João Ribas, and an exhibition chronology assembled by MOCA Curatorial Assistant Jennifer Park. Amanda Ross-Ho (b. 1975, Chicago) is a Los Angeles-based artist who received her MFA from the University of Southern California in 2006 and her BFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1998. Ross-Ho’s work has been featured in three MOCA exhibitions, including George Herms: Xenophilia (Love of the Unknown) (2011), The Artist’s Museum (2010), and Index: Conceptualism In California From The Permanent Collection (2008). Her work has been included in New Photography at The Museum of Modern Art (2010); Image Transfer: Pictures in a Remix Culture at the Henry Art Gallery (2010); and was the subject of a solo exhibition at the Pomona College Museum of Art titled Amanda Ross-Ho: The Cheshire Cat Principle (2010). Her work was also included in the Whitney Biennial (2008) and the Orange County Biennial (2008). This will be the artist’s first museum exhibition accompanied by a catalogue.

AMANDA ROSS-HO: TEENY TINY WOMAN is made possible by generous support from The MOCA Contemporaries, Marc J. Lee, and Christopher Yin and John Yoon.

Generous support for MOCA Pacific Design Center is provided by Charles S. Cohen.

THE MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, LOS ANGELES (MOCA)
Founded in 1979, MOCA’s mission is to be the defining museum of contemporary art. The institution has achieved astonishing growth in its brief history—with three Los Angeles locations of architectural renown; more than 13,500 members; a world-class permanent collection of nearly 6,500 works international in scope and among the finest in the nation; hallmark education programs that are widely emulated; award-winning publications that present original scholarship; and groundbreaking monographic, touring, and thematic exhibitions of international repute that survey the art of our time. MOCA is a private not-for-profit institution supported by its members, corporate and foundation support, government grants, and retail and admission revenues.

MEDIA CONTACTS
MOCA
Lyn Winter, Director of Communications
Tel 213 633 5390
lwinter@moca.org
Nancy Lee, PR Coordinator
Tel 213 621 1788
nlee@moca.org

RELATED EVENTS

MEMBERS' OPENING
Friday, June 22, 7-9pm
MOCA Pacific Design Center
MOCA members are invited to preview AMANDA ROSS-HO: TEENY TINY WOMAN.
INFO 213 621 1794 or membership1@moca.org
FREE for MOCA members

ART TALK WITH AMANDA ROSS-HO
Sunday, June 24, 3pm
West Hollywood Public Library, Council Chambers
625 N. San Vicente Blvd. (Located across the street from MOCA Pacific Design Center)
After exploring AMANDA ROSS-HO: TEENY TINY WOMAN, join the artist across the street in the beautiful West Hollywood Public Library for a discussion about her work in the exhibition, which was created specifically for the MOCA Pacific Design Center space.
INFO 213 621 1745 or education@moca.org
FREE; no reservations

MOCA Pacific Design Center
8687 Melrose Avenue (West Hollywood) - Los Angeles
Open 11am to 5pm Tuesday through Friday; 11am to 6pm on Saturday and Sunday; and closed on Monday
Admission to MOCA Pacific Design Center is always free

IN ARCHIVIO [7]
Amanda Ross-Ho
dal 21/6/2012 al 22/9/2012

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