On view are new works from the ongoing Terrain and Cityscape series. Also on exhibit for the first time are new photo works of real urban landscape juxtaposing almost-real but imaginary landscapes with the almost-imaginary yet real landscapes.
people in white houses
Opening reception with the Artist, Saturday, May 10, 6 - 8 pm
Talwar Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new works by Allan
deSouza. The exhibition, people in white houses will open to the public on
Saturday, May 10, and will be on view through June 16. There will be an opening
reception with the artist on Saturday, May 10 from 6-8 pm.
On view are new works from the ongoing Terrain and Cityscape series. Also on
exhibit for the first time are new photo works of real urban landscape
juxtaposing almost-real but imaginary landscapes with the almost-imaginary yet
real landscapes.
Beckoning us with their enigmatic yet beautiful distant vistas, deSouza's
landscapes reveal their constituents of dressed up societal refuse. The choice
of materials and titles impart irony and expose the immediacy of the works while
connecting with the past. On approach, the inhospitability of the desolate,
rugged terrain in searching for answers without knowing the questions fades as
one discovers the elements of the landscape similar to countless make-shift
memorials and actually a beacon for prayers. In everything west of here is
Indian country, the artist metaphorically draws on the White City built for the
1893 Chicago World (Columbian) Exposition to herald the coming of America and
establish itself as the new world power. The city, resplendent with its borrowed
Greco-Roman facades, reveals a supremacist endeavor, attempting to upstage the
previous host of the fair, France, while keeping at bay the economic and racial
tribulations. In madinat-al-salam, (The 7th century City of Peace, now known as
Baghdad), a dusty oriental city is created from pills and empty water and milk
bottles. The landscape in the Goncourt Brothers stand between Caesar and the
Thief of Baghdad, despite its questionable visual authenticity, appears to have
been resurrected by current events.
Dispelling the notion of landscape as a neutral entity, deSouza excavates
embedded socio-political and cultural codes. While journeying with deSouza,
negotiating the space between fact and fiction, one succumbs to the amorphous
nature of their distinction. The artist utilizes memory as a unique companion
while embarking on the journey through his landscapes. Attracted by their
painstaking beauty, on closer examination they reveal our misplaced views and
their own ironic nature. Employing photography and digital imaging to his
meticulously created sculptural landscapes, deSouza blurs the nature of his
discipline to accentuate our questioning and our experience.
Allan deSouza was born in 1958 in Nairobi, Kenya of Indian parents and raised in
England. He was educated at the Bath Academy of Art in England and at
Goldsmiths College in London. In 1992 he moved to the United States and
continued his education in Critical Studies at the Whitney Independent Study
Program in New York. In 1997 he received a Master of Fine Arts from UCLA.
deSouza's work has been exhibited in group and solo exhibitions frequently
across the US and England, as well as in Canada, Germany, Portugal, South Korea
and the Philippines. In New York his works were included in Out of India at the
Queens Museum in 1997; Transforming the Crown at the Studio Museum in Harlem in
1997. In 2001 he was the Artist-in-residence at Art in General, New York. A
performance collaboration with Yong S. Min, Will **** for Peace was held at
Mezzanine Gallery in Minneapolis in 2002 and will travel this year to Oboro
Gallery, Montreal, Canada. Currently, deSouza's works are in Un/Familiar
Territory at the San Jose Museum of Art, California, and later this year will be
seen at Ssamzie Space in Seoul, South Korea and in Looking Both Ways at the
Museum of African Art in New York.
Allan deSouza lives and works in Los Angeles.
Image:
"shadows cross Madinat Al-Salam"
C-Print on Aluminum 15.75" x 49.25" 2003
TALWAR GALLERY
108 East 16 Street
New York, NY 10003
(212) 673 3096