Mana Contemporary
Jersey City
888 Newark Avenue, 6th Floor
1 800 330 9659
WEB
Three exhibitions
dal 13/9/2014 al 12/3/2015
mon-fri 10am-5pm

Segnalato da

Selena Ricks



 
calendario eventi  :: 




13/9/2014

Three exhibitions

Mana Contemporary, Jersey City

"Francesco Clemente, George Condo, Chuck Connelly, Julio Galan, and Daniel Lezama in the Pellizzi Family Collections" sees an unusual grouping of artists who have pushed representation to the edge by various pictorial means. "Ken Price and Harvey Mudd: The Plain of Smokes" features thirty original silkscreen prints Price created to illustrate a 75-page poem cycle written by Mudd. "Erro': American Comics" features selected works highlighting the artist's trademark comic book aesthetics.


comunicato stampa

Francesco Clemente, George Condo, Chuck Connelly, Julio Galán, and Daniel Lezama in the Pellizzi Family Collections
September 14, 2014 – March 13, 2015

JERSEY CITY, NJ, Aug. 7, 2014—Mana Contemporary and the Eileen S. Kaminsky Family Foundation are pleased to present Francesco Clemente, George Condo, Chuck Connelly, Julio Galán, and Daniel Lezama in the Pellizzi Family Collections, a remarkable exhibition of paintings, on view from September 14, 2014 – March 13, 2015. A public opening reception will be held Sunday, September 14, from 1 to 7 p.m.

The exhibition, which is installed over three floors of gallery space, is drawn from the collections of the Pellizzi family. Francesco Pellizzi, an Italian anthropologist, co-founder and editor of the Harvard journal Res, Anthropology and Aesthetics, has written extensively on contemporary art, and lives in New York City. He collected Tribal Art and artifacts as well as Minimal Art since the 1970s, but was later especially drawn to the so-called ‘new image’ (or neo-Expressionist) artists from Europe and North America (including Mexico) whom he encountered in New York City in the ‘80s. The work by these artists often resonated with undertones of mysticism, mythology, history, and even a surreal sort of romanticism. Of those in the present exhibition, Pellizzi acquired a significant body of work in relation to their production at the start of their careers.

This exhibition sees an unusual grouping of artists who have pushed representation to the edge by various pictorial means, and who share a strongly personal manner. These works also reflect the Pellizzi family’s close personal ties to the New York City art scene, in the ‘80s and following decades, a time known for a revival of painting, and the rise of art stars such as Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring, David Salle, Julian Schnabel, and Francesco Clemente himself. As a collector, but also as an anthropologist, writer, and editor, Pellizzi was naturally able to connect with the work of several emerging artists.

Mana Contemporary presents the work of Francesco Clemente (b. 1952, Italy) in the sixth floor gallery. The show includes several large oil-on-canvas pictures and various works on paper that deftly combine iconography from various cultures and spiritual traditions, interweaving fable and metaphor, while pointing to a commonality of experience. Clemente’s signature subject, the human form, takes on dreamlike qualities imbued with imagination, heightened awareness, and eroticism. “Clemente’s own interest in the arts of traditional civilizations and the originality of his ‘manner’ and of his ‘hand’ deeply struck me from my very first encounter with his work,” says Pellizzi.

George Condo (b. 1957, U.S.) is presented in Mana’s fifth floor gallery with a selection of his early paintings and drawings that attest to the origins of his singular style. Pellizzi says Condo’s natural ‘facility’ and virtuoso-like pictorial ability seemed to “almost run counter to the conceptualcomplexities of his ‘neo-Surrealist’ and ‘meta-hysterical’ imagination.” Condo’s carnivalesque collection of creatures are like studies in the multiplicity andabsurdity of his perception of the everyday.

The exhibition continues in Mana Contemporary’s first floor gallery with Chuck Connelly (b. 1955, U.S.), Julio Galán (1959-2006, Mexico), as well as Mexican painter Daniel Lezama (b. 1968). Connelly, known for his thick, churning brushstrokes, achieved a ‘hallucinated’ Neo-Expressionist painting style that made him known in the mid-‘80s and is now being rediscovered: his work will soon also be featured at the Warhol Museum, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Around 1986, when Pellizzi learned, through Andy Warhol, that Julio Galán had moved to New York from Mexico, he made the artist’s acquaintance, acquired a group of his paintings, and promptly introduced him to gallerist Annina Nosei. Galán’s cathartic paintings are curious amalgams of Surrealist inspiration and post-modern collage, evoking childhood memories, longing, sensuality and guilt, while also reflecting Catholic and pre-Columbian iconography and Mexican folklore, sometimes reminiscent of the inspiration of Frida Kahlo.

While Galán interiorized his journey of personal exploration and expression, Lezama, who belongs to a newer generation of Neo-Mexicanist painters, re-appropriates the stereotypes of Mexico’s cultural and historical icons by turning them on their mythical heads. In the tradition of the great muralists, Lezama’s large-format epic canvases, as well as his thumbnail sketches and stark portraits, can be seen as a sort of meta-realism, theatrically displaying a classical painting style, laden with provocative symbolism, but often also subverting it with iconoclastic results. Here again, we see that deliberate pictorial ‘alienation’ that is the enigmatic and unsettling thread running through the work of all five artists presented in the exhibition.

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Ken Price and Harvey Mudd: The Plain of Smokes
September 14 – December 19, 2014

Mana Contemporary and Gary Lichtenstein Editions at Mana present Ken Price and Harvey Mudd: The Plain of Smokes, an exhibition featuring thirty original silkscreen prints Price created to illustrate a 75-page poem cycle written by Mudd. On view from September 14 to December 19, 2014, the exhibition is presented in Mana Contemporary’s 2nd floor gallery.

Published by Arabesque Books in 1981, The Plain of Smokes is an ode to the Los Angeles that shaped both the artist and the poet. The process, which began in 1978, of conceptualizing, developing, and creating The Plain of Smokes, has been described by many, including its author, as the true definition of the word “collaboration.” Mudd and Price continually motivated revision in each other’s work, resulting in a thought-provoking visualization of the dialogue between two artists.

Arabesque Books asked Gary Lichtenstein of SOMA Fine Art Press in San Francisco to print Price’s multilayered paintings featuring pencil, gouache, watercolor, and india ink for the book. In order to translate every last nuance of color relationship and texture from the original work into printer’s ink, Lichtenstein deconstructed Price’s work layer by layer. The most complicated image in the series, “Club Zebra,” required 28 color separations and nearly 5,000 passes through the hand press to print 186 copies. The prints’ “painterly” qualities are a stunning testament to Lichtenstein’s mastery.

Ken Price (1935-2012) emerged in the 1960s with a group of Los Angeles-based “surfer artists” that included, among others, Ed Ruscha, Robert Irwin, and Larry Bell. Price is known principally as a ceramicist yet throughout his career he has commanded a unique position between sculpture and painting. An artist who is celebrated for challenging conventional ideals and definitions, Price is a technical master of form, color, and surface.

Harvey Mudd (1940) is a writer, painter, and photographer. His first of four books of poetry was published in 1976, and the third, The Plain of Smokes, was short-listed for the Los Angeles Times Poetry Prize. New Mexico was Mudd’s primary home for roughly 20 years and it was there that he met Price.

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Erró: American Comics
September 14 – December 13, 2014

Mana Contemporary is proud to introduce Galerie Ernst Hilger of Vienna as the newest commercial gallery to join the art complex. For its initial exhibition, Galerie Ernst Hilger at Mana presents a collection of works by one of Iceland’s foremost Pop artists, Erró (b. 1932), who is known for his paintings based on collage.

On view September 14 – December 13, 2014 in Mana Contemporary’s 5,000-square-foot first floor gallery, Erró: American Comics features selected works highlighting the artist’s trademark comic book aesthetics. Large-scale canvases teem with superheroes and other cartoon characters all vying for attention while simultaneously commenting on socio-political issues such as the Americanization of existence.

During his travels around the world, Erró has collected a wealth of images from newsprint, magazines, books, posters, and of course, comics, creating his own personal archive of inspiration to cut and paste. Starting in the early 1960’s, Erró made several extended visits to New York, where he encountered American Pop art and became acquainted with Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist, and Andy Warhol, among others. These artists influenced Erró to combine pictorial elements from a wide variety of popular sources to display contradictions inherent in a world of never-ending consumption.

The exhibition presents a series of the artist’s colorful landscapes – “Scapes” – and sagas of superheroes such as Wonder Woman andTank Girl. Mixing different comics’ characters from different authors together in one image, the results are raucous, jarring, and yet, universally accessible.

About Mana Contemporary
Mana Contemporary is a leading arts destination with locations in Jersey City and Chicago. Studios, exhibition spaces, art services, and programming provide an unparalleled environment for creating and experiencing art. By exposing and exploring the artistic process, Mana Contemporary offers an exciting way to discover and learn about art while artists are enabled to experiment and collaborate across all disciplines, forms, and media. Mana Contemporary is home to the Richard Meier Model Museum, Gary Lichtenstein Editions silkscreen studio, the Eileen S. Kaminsky Family Foundation, the Middle East Center for the Arts, Shen Wei Dance Arts, the Keating Foundry, and more. For more information about Mana Contemporary, please visit www.manacontemporary.com.

Image: Francesco Clemente, Untitled, 1995. Oil on canvas, 47.5 x 62 in.

Press Contact:
Selena Ricks — Public Relations Director
sricks@manacontemporary.com
T. 201.484.1495 ext. 672

Exhibitions opening: Sunday, September 14, 1 – 7 PM

Mana Contemporary
888 Newark Avenue Jersey City, NJ 07306
Hours
Monday – Friday, 10 am – 5 pm
Tours available at 11 am, 2 pm, and 4 pm

IN ARCHIVIO [10]
Five exhibitions
dal 17/10/2015 al 31/7/2016

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