Solo show. Dwyer's new work, "Deep, Deep, Deeper, Down" (2005-06), explores terrain which at first glance seems to be familiar territory for the artist: the visually evocative power of the isolated word conceived in virtual space and executed in a diverse range of materials.
Solo show
Sandra Gering Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of work by Nancy
Dwyer from 4 March through 8 April 2006.
Nancy Dwyer's new work - Deep, Deep, Deeper, Down (2005-06) - explores
terrain which at first glance seems to be familiar territory for the
artist: the visually evocative power of the isolated word conceived in
virtual space and executed in a diverse range of materials. What is
strikingly new in this body of work is the tightly focused investigation of
interconnected and interdependent images (words) that, though virtually
mediated, operate as traditional art forms.
Richly colored prints dovetail as diagrams for sculptures constructed like
children's building blocks of untreated wood, or manipulated plaster. The
sculptures in turn support other ways of looking at the paintings whose
frescoed surfaces both contrast and re-enforce illusionistic perspectives
articulated within the silhouettes of the words they depict. Viewed as a
whole, Dwyer's exhibit underlines the tension which can be generated
between surface and depth, allusion and illusion, form and meaning,
simplicity and complexity.
The varied dimensional states in which the words exist in the evolution of
their design calls into question the relationship of object to its
representation. This destabilization of what is "real" or "original"
corresponds to the slippage of meaning that can happen when a word is
de-contextualized and treated as an object of contemplation. Sometimes
what is literal is not so clear.
By playfully drawing the viewer across a spectrum of word meanings, from
flat depiction to fully dimensional rendering, Dwyer revisits modernist
issues of 'objecthood' and 'art'. However, it would be a mistake to view
her new paintings as 'specific object', or even 'signs', just as it would
be misleading to view the work solely as extensions of the formalist
concerns of modernism. Her work falls somewhere in between those two poles.
Also included in the exhibition is a large-scale digital image, Entitled To
What, both a meditation on acquisition and a broader cultural comment. It
consists of 830 individual images -- all pulled off the internet --
representing a sort of generalized autobiographical collection of things
shopped for. The empty spaces in the grid of images reveal the title
(ironically in a typeface of absence) in a sort of perceptual puzzle that
mimics the emotional state of wanting or desire.
Opening reception 4 march, 6-8pm
Sandra Gering Gallery
534 West 22nd Street - New York
Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10am to 6pm.