Did not want to [-?-] his [-?-] of [-?-]. Using as title an excerpt from the Melville's Marginalia virtual archive, Cowan contextualizes his exhibition with a meditation on the periphery, of value in the trivial.
Clifton Benevento is pleased to present Did not want to [—?—] his [—?—] of [—?—]., the New York solo exhibition debut of
the Chicago based artist Paul Cowan. The exhibition will run from September 8th to November 3rd, 2012.
Using as title an excerpt from Melville’s Marginalia – a virtual archive dedicated to the documentation of books owned and borrowed by Herman Melville and designed to showcase the author’s extensive liner notes — Cowan contextualizes his exhibition with a meditation on the periphery, of value in the trivial.
In Paul Cowan’s latest body of work, the artist often develops themes of ”process” to stand in or to replace the material of his medium. Cowan’s “sign paintings,” for example, feature minimal, economic gestures that
frequently invoke both negative and positive space. These works, which are made
by professional sign painters rather than specifically by the artist’s hand, open
questions of value and ethics of work and how each are often tied to notions of
commodity, exchange and trade. The formal qualities of paint are further expanded upon in Cowan’s “scented walls,” works wherein essential oils are combined with latex paint. Illuminating paint as both a context and support for the work, these objects also open up questions about temporality and obsolescence – the scent of the paint fades before the color. These works, which can be used to cover bare gallery / institutional walls, have
the ability to both restore exhibition spaces to a “white cube” standard while
simultaneously producing an art object and thereby gesturing to the painterly
tension between concealing and revealing.
Using stainless steel urinal partitions to formally and conceptually punctuate
space, Cowan’s “steel partitions,” while purchased direct from a manufacturer,
are only fully realized during the installation process. Here, the works
accumulate the marks and scuffs inherent in any installation process, a reaction
in part to the passive nature of stainless steel which Cowan inflects as
both a formal and conceptual quality. As the piece is repeatedly installed and
de-installed the marks on the object become less those of artist and instead
begin to generate content by questioning its own production in terms of its
distribution. These works ultimately problematize the “original” by never being
able to fully mimic its previous presentation/performance.
Paul Cowan was born in 1985 in Kansas City, KS and will be featured in an upcoming solo exhibition at MCA Chicago this fall. Recent projects include Important
Projects (Oakland, CA), Michael Jon Gallery (Miami, FL), Shane Campbell (Oak
Park, IL). Recent group exhibitions
include ‘Everyday Abstract – Abstract Everyday’, James Cohan Gallery (New York,
NY),’ New Work’, ‘Mise-en-scene’, Young Art, (Los Angeles, CA), ‘Phantom
Limb’, Museum of Contemporary Art, (Chicago, IL) and
Hello? I Forgot My Mantra, Clifton Benevento, (New York, NY).
Image: Untitled (UP2U), 2012, Gum, custom frame, 16 x 12 inches
opening reception is Saturday, September 8 from 5-7pm
Clifton Benevento
515 Broadway between Broome and Spring streets, New York, NY
open Tuesday-Saturday, 11am-6pm