Stanley Whitney's works is based on the idea of multiple horizon lines and relates to such basic human activities as textile making and architecture. Skip Arnold works within the tradition of Body Art and Actionism. In his performance art, he seeks out extremes and intensities, testing the limits of physical endurance.
Stanley Whitney / Skip Arnold
Stanley Whitney was born in Philadelphia in 1946, lives and works in New York and Rome. Attended
courses at Yale University, at Kansas City Art Institute and at Columbus College in
Ohio. Numerous exhibits since the 70s, including the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary
Art, The Studio Museum Harlem, Jack Tilton Gallery New York, Magazzino d´Arte
Moderna Rome, Zerynthia Rome, Esso Gallery New York, Jack Shainman Gallery, New
York. We first displayed Whitney‘s art in the exhibit Quiet As It’s Kept curated by
David Hammons in 2002 and together with the Austrian painter Andreas Reiter Raabe in
2003. Catalogues with texts by Geoffrey Jacques and Raphael Rubinstein were
published by the gallery for both shows.
Whitney´s works can be thought in relation to Donald Judd, Philip Guston and African
esthetics. It is based on the idea of multiple horizon lines and relates to such
basic human activities as textile making and architecture.
The structure of the paintings by Stanley Whitney is radical through its simplicity:
rectangular blocks of color are layered on top of oneanother in rows and separated
by horizontal ribbons of color. This structure purely serves the purpose of
painting, yet at the same time representing communication on a metabolical level.
Whitney‘s art is sumptuous and laconic, its efficiency strangely correlates to the
city in which he lives: New York. Not mistakenly, the arrangement and the effect of
the many color applications in various shades of green, orange, red, blue, etc. have
been compared to the rhythm of jazz, a visual polyrhythm.
What remains fundamental is the playful approach to color, the dynamic tension that
is introduced between the colors, the formal complexity, and the apparent
nonchalance with which he attains it.
Third Room: Skip Arnold video films 1983 - 2007
was born in Binghamton, New York in 1957, lives and works in Los Angeles.
Numerous solo performances, exhibitions and lecturers since the early 80s, including
Frédéric Giroux Paris, Kunsthalle Wien, Union London, ACE Gallery New York, Nové
Zamky Slovakia, Roberts & Tilton Los Angeles, Galerie MXM Prague, Shoshana Wayne
Gallery Santa Monica.
Born in New York in 1957, but a long-time resident of California, Skip Arnold works
within the tradition of Body Art and Actionism. In his performance art, the artist
seeks out extremes and intensities, testing the limits of physical endurance. Arnold
isolates and alienates everyday and functionalised series of movement and behaviour
mechanisms. If one wants to locate Arnold in other contexts, one can also find in
his art a crossing of borders, as in the work of Chris Burden, or a certain
masochism, as in the case of Bob Flanagan, aggressive and disturbing aspects, as
with Bruce Nauman, as well as the exhibitionism to be found in the work of Carolee
Schneeman.
He usually documents his art by means of a video camera or photography, and although
his work is connected with temporal sequences, he makes intensive use of ‘catch
phrases’, compressing them into memorable images: in one case, Skip Arnold’s body
mutates into the root of a tree, in another Skip presents himself as Leonardo’s
"vitruvian human being", naked and with extended limbs, clamped into the façade of a
building (in some cases, such an action has even resulted in the arrest of the
gallery owners!). Alternatively, in line with the motto ‘No risk, no fun’ and
possibly intended as a homage to his teacher Chris Burden, Skip walks around the
most dangerous streets of Los Angeles wearing a T-shirt displaying the letters
‘Shoot me’. Amusing or just tired of life? An enhancement of life through the
ultimate kick.
(Angela Stief, 2007)
Opening: March 29, 2007, 7 – 9 pm
Christine Koenig Galerie
Schleifmuehlgasse 1A - Vien
Free admission