Eric Bell
Kristoffer Frick
The Infinite Library
Daniel Gustav Cramer
Haris Epaminonda
Leslie Hewitt
Matt Keegan
huber.huber
Nashashibi
Skaer
Latitudes
Max Andrews
Mariana Canepa Luna
The project brings together the work of 5 artist-duos to consider duality, simultaneity, saturation and proliferation. The exhibition pursues, on the one hand, the implications of two individuals working together as a single author-function and, on the other, operates alongside artwork concerned with the reproducibility of images. In part a hermeneutical maze - itself curated by a duo (Latitudes: Max Andrews & Mariana Canepa Luna) - The show highlights a condition where decisions and imagery are at least twice mediated.
Curated by Latitudes: Max Andrews & Mariana Cánepa Luna
Artists: Eric Bell & Kristoffer Frick (1985 St. Catharines, Canada; 1985 Nuertingen, Germany. Both live in Frankfurt); The Infinite Library (Daniel Gustav Cramer & Haris Epaminonda) (1975 Düsseldorf, Germany; 1980 Nicosia, Cyprus. Both live in Berlin); huber.huber (1975 Münsterlingen, Switzerland. Both live in Zurich); Leslie Hewitt & Matt Keegan (1977 Saint Albans, New York; 1976 Manhasset, New York. Both live in New York) and Nashashibi/Skaer (1973 Croydon; 1975 Cambridge. Both live in London)
The Garden of Forking Paths brings together the work of five artist-duos to consider duality, simultaneity, saturation and proliferation. The exhibition pursues, on the one hand, the implications of two individuals working together as a single author-function and, on the other, operates alongside artwork concerned with the reproducibility of images. In part a hermeneutical maze – itself curated and hosted by duos (Latitudes and MAISTERRAVALBUENA, respectively) The Garden of Forking Paths highlights a condition where decisions and imagery are at least twice mediated.
The duos of the exhibition are each composed of different personal and professional dynamics – the artists are variously exclusive collaborators, related by birth, occasional accomplices, couples in life, and so on. Comprising works using editorial, photographic, sculptural, procedural, collage and appropriation techniques, 'The Garden of Forking Paths' is concerned with such conditions in the context of the synthesis, modulation and reuse of images over time.
The exhibition takes its title from the 1941 short story by Jorge Luis Borges which centres on an apparently unfathomable novel and a mysterious labyrinth which are revealed to be one and the same. Written as if a statement by a double agent, this dense mystery tale proposes reality as a profusion of divergent alternatives and dimensions, a saturation of all possible outcomes.
Eric Bell & Kristoffer Frick present two works ('Untitled' (2007) and 'The pleasure of moving from place to place' (2008)) which affirm the fundamentally illusory nature of photography. ‘The Infinite Library’ (2007–ongoing), two books from which are presented here, is an expanding, seemingly arbitrary archive by Daniel Gustav Cramer & Haris Epaminonda inspired in part by the writings of Borges. huber.huber’s monochromatic series ‘dark grounds’ (2007-8) juxtaposes photojournalism and wildlife studies replicating the dislocation so crucial to Surrealism and offers a portentous and uncertain wilderness. Leslie Hewitt & Matt Keegan’s 'CMYK Floral' (2007) consists of the presentation of weekly monochromatic flower arrangements, corresponding in sequence with the inks used in four colour printing. Nashashibi/Skaer present eighteen photographs from the installation 'Pygmalion Workshop' (2008) inspired by the myth of Pygmalion in which he sculpts an ivory figure which is brought to life by Aphrodite to become his lover.
Opened in 2007, the gallery is located around the corner from the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía. The gallery represents Antonio Ballester Moreno, Karmelo Bermejo, Kate Gilmore, Regina de Miguel, Paloma Polo, Hiraki Sawa and Christián Silva. In 2008 MAISTERRAVALBUENA participated in Volta, Basel, and in 2009 in ARCO'09.
Image: huber.huber, Mikrouniversum und andere kleine Systeme IV, 2009. Courtesy the artists.
Opening: Thursday 28 May, 20h
Maisterravalbuena
Doctor Fourquet 1 - 28012 Madrid
Hours:
Mon-Fri 11-14;16-20.30
Sat 11-14pm