Weeping Atlas Cedar. The exhibition includes several renderings of trees, constructed from canvas stretched on wood supports and based on drawings by the artist. First Floor: Gunther Forg / Lucio Fontana: Bronze/Terracotta.
Massimo De Carlo gallery is proud to present Weeping Atlas Cedar: the first exhibition by American artist
Nate Lowman in the gallery’s new Mayfair outpost.
The show’s title refers to a species of tree with a strange, elegiac appearance, featuring long, drooping
branches that reach downward to make it look both graceful and awkward. Lowman’s exhibition includes
several renderings of trees, constructed from canvas stretched on wood supports and based on drawings by
the artist.
There is a misshapen monochromatic tree that suggests a pose of genuflection similar to that of the Weeping
Atlas, and there are echoes of the iconic automotive air freshener tree that Lowman has sampled in a
previous series of artworks. However, rather than precisely duplicate cultural imagery as he has done in the
past, here Lowman has chosen to depict shapes drawn by his own hand, and to mix iconography in a way
that weakens the singularity of individual images, often resulting in hybrid, less legible forms.
This exhibition is a departure from Lowman’s earlier work in its reliance on an inner logic within his shapes’
own reiterations and breakdowns, a process that would have been less visible in his previous works that make
use of weightier American cultural references. Lowman’s longtime use of found images is still present, but
recently such materials have found their way into his work in more subtle, personal ways.
For instance, some of the shaped canvases are printed with inkjet images but are treated with drips of paint
and scuff marks. The familiar air freshener tree is present, yet it bears a wide hole in its side, a replica of the
void of the “bite” in the Apple logo. The leaf of the Apple appears here as well, multiplied into a varicolored
throng of mottled, flecked, glossy, and matte foliage. There are other cartoonish variations on the tree shape,
ranging from a bouncy rounded form to a gently traced iteration that looks like a melted version of the
original, to the warped topiary seemingly modelled on the Weeping Atlas of the show title.
On the walls of the gallery, these works could read as a new development in Lowman’s signature “cut and
paste” aesthetic, resulting in a quite literal collage like effect when installed, with the frame of the canvas and
its contents appearing roughly equal in proportion. There are finer outlines in black or white paint on some
of the canvases, rendering sketchy ornamental patterns that form flower and tree shapes similar to those of
the larger canvases on the wall. The repetitions seem like precursors or afterthoughts, ghosts of the more
resolved forms that are their support.
This contrast between the outline of the canvases and the smaller forms contained within them intimates a
porousness between sculpture and painting, figure and landscape.
Weeping Atlas Cedar is a landscaping plant, more often seen in gardens than nature, and many of Lowman’s
shapes reference items that might be found in a garden: flowers, leaves, trees. Cut out and placed on the wall,
the series cultivates an interiority that could find its parallel in a controlled patch of nature with its own
human-scale logic, temporarily closed off from but inevitably destined to return to wilder open spaces.
Nate Lowman was born in 1979 in Las Vegas, he currently lives and works in New York. Solo exhibitions
include: I Wanted to Be an Artist But All I Got Was This Lousy Career, The Brant Foundation Art Study
Center, Greenwich, USA, (2012); Three Amigos: Gift Ghost GAP, American Academy in Rome, Rome, Italy,
(2011); The Natrioct Act, Astrup Fearnely Museum, Oslo, Norway, (2009); Nate Lowman, The Hydra
Workshop, Hydra, Greece, (2009); Axis of Praxis, Midway Contemporary Art Center, Minneapolis,
USA,(2006). His work has been exhibited internationally in many group exhibitions including: Three Blind
Mice, Dhondt-Dhaenens Museum, Deurle, Belgium, (2014); Temi e Variazioni. L’Impero della Luce, Peggy
Guggenheim Collection, Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, Venice, Italy (2014); Nate Lowman: Homage to Jay Defeo,
public performance at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, USA (2013); American
Exuberance, Rubell Family Collection, Miami, USA, (2011); George Herms: Xenophilia (Love of the
Unknown), MOCA, Los Angeles (2011); Fresh Hell, Palais de Tokio, Paris, France, (2010); The Last
Newspaper, The New Museum, New York (2010); Greater New York, PS1 Contemporary Art Center, New
York (2005). In 2013 Nate Lowman took part in the 12th Biennale de Lyon, La Biennale de Lyon in France.
First Floor:
GÜNTHER FÖRG/LUCIO FONTANA
Bronze/Terracotta
Image: Nate Lowman
Opening: Monday October 13th, 2014, from 6.00pm
Massimo De Carlo
55 South Audley Street, W1K 2QH London
Open Tuesday to Saturday, 10:00am–6.00p.m.