Redling Fine Art
Los Angeles
6757 Santa Monica Blvd
323.230.7415 FAX 323.924.5560
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Liz Glynn
dal 6/9/2012 al 19/10/2012
tue-sat 10-5pm

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Redling Fine Art


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Liz Glynn



 
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6/9/2012

Liz Glynn

Redling Fine Art, Los Angeles

Hoard. Her first gallery-based exhibition looks not only at how value is assigned to material objects, but our motivations for a limitless accumulation and protection of wealth.


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Throughout history objects have been assigned value in disparate and disproportionate ways. From the Bronze Age to the present, one can trace the history of human value-systems not only through the objects we have stored away (whether as savings for the future or as offerings for the afterlife), but also the containers we have used to protect them. In times of uncertainty (war, plague, financial crisis, etc.), the urge to stockpile capital in physical form becomes all the more prevalent. Long after such crises have passed and the original owners have themselves returned to the ground, these troves remain as evidence of that paranoid desire. Over the last century, metal-detector hobbyists and archeologists alike have discovered abundances of coins, jewelry, and ceremonial tools dating back to 2400 BCE, such the Dorchester Hoard and the Vale of York Hoard. The sentiments and use-value of the objects is lost; they become treasure, artifacts, or mere curiosities.

Whether “ownership” is lost through the passing of time or in a more violent and immediate way; there has always been futility in the enterprise of crafting a perfectly secure container, an arms race with a predictable end. Early hobnail safes constructed of wood were not immune to fire, which led Diebold and others to produce the fireproof forged-metal safes that outlasted even the Great Chicago Fire of 1871. But it was soon found that these could be opened with explosive charges, leading to bank-vault safety-deposit boxes, and so on.

Liz Glynn’s HOARD, her first gallery-based exhibition at Redling Fine Art, will look not only at how value is assigned to material objects, but our motivations for a limitless accumulation and protection of wealth. Moving from her recent large-scale performances and installations to a more intimate set of objects, this exhibition considers the supremely private act of hoarding valuables. In works such as the Lost and Found series, Glynn recreates ancient treasures found in the earth out of the earth itself (clay hardened it in a pit-firing process), producing an idiosyncratic and sometime equivoque material language that continues in the trajectory of her earlier of replicas, copies and surrogates.

Liz Glynn creates sculpture, large-scale installations, and participatory performances using epic historical narratives to explore the potential for change. Her practice seeks to embody dynamic cycles of growth, possibility, and decay by evidencing process, encouraging participation, and inciting future action. Recent projects include III a multi-site installation and event series produced by Redling Fine Art; Utopia or Oblivion, for Performa 11, New York; loving you is like fucking the dead, at MoCA, Los Angeles; and black box produced by LAXART and the Getty Research Institute as part of the Pacific Standard Time Festival. Her work has also been presented at The New Museum (NYC), LACMA (Los Angeles), The Hammer Museum (Los Angeles), Paula Cooper Gallery (NYC), Southern Exposure (San Francisco), and Arthouse at the Jones Center (Austin). Reviews of her projects have appeared in The New York Times, New York Magazine, the Los Angeles Times, Art Lies, Domus, Archaeology Magazine, Frieze, and Artforum. Glynn was a finalist for the 2012 Mohn Award for her work in Made in LA, organized by LAXART and the Hammer Museum and she will be included in Lost Line: Selections from the Permanent Collection at LACMA in November, as well as upcoming projects with LACMA, Los Angeles and Sculpture Center, New York in 2013.

Image: Liz Glynn, III, produced by Redling Fine Art, Los Angeles, 2010. A temporary installation housing a series of nine performances exploring irrational fear in the context of the financial crisis.

Opening Reception: Friday, September 7

Redling Fine Art
6757 Santa Monica Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90038
Hours: Tuesday – Saturday 10 – 5 PM
Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday, 10 – 6pm

IN ARCHIVIO [2]
Mario Correa
dal 8/11/2012 al 21/12/2012

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