Elke Krystufek has created a multi-layered installation that extends the intricate crossmodal references characteristic of her exhibitions to include Vito Acconci's groundbreaking design for the exhibiting space, Kenny Schachter's conTEMPorary. Elements of her exhibition include paintings, photographs, videos, a sculpture, an installation, and a performance.
Elke Krystufek
Elke Krystufek has created a multi-layered installation that extends
the intricate crossmodal references characteristic of her exhibitions
to include Vito Acconci's groundbreaking design for the exhibiting
space, Kenny Schachter's conTEMPorary. Elements of her exhibition
include paintings, photographs, videos, a sculpture, an installation,
and a performance.
The exhibition derives its title, Silent Scream, from a series of
eight photographs, which invites comparison with Edward Munch's
famous painting(s), The Scream. But Krystufek's face is not frozen
white by an anxiety so overwhelming that it can no longer be
vocalized. The white face serves as canvas, as a projection wall,
used by Krystufek to develop her own means of expression, not just of
her fears, but also of those levels of interaction between the
individual and its social environment that elude easy capture by
vocalization.
These issues are further elaborated on in Performance for
shortsighted people, Elke Krystufek's performance during the opening
of the show. Participants are encouraged to interact with the artist
by writing on her body, which will be painted white in its entirety.
Interaction is also addressed, albeit in an increasingly paradoxical
manner, in some of the paintings. One "interactive painting" shows
Krystufek against a background of colored diamond shapes and white.
It is called "Fill in the empty spaces." Another painting informs
us: "Interactive painting: Make your own photo!" Finally, there is a
fragile chair sculpture with a pink circle on its seat that reads:
"Interactive painting: Please take a seat." Following this
suggestion most likely would destroy the sculpture. Would it also
constitute an act of painting?
As the paintings in the show illustrate, Krystufek frequently employs
the self-portrait as a medium for tackling other subject matters.
This she achieves by incorporating texts, documents, photographs,
even objects, into her paintings. Among the issues raised here are
capitalist democracy, the role of suicide, architecture and public
space, the impact of skin color, and the artist's peculiar
experiences preparing for her participation in "Mirroring Evil," the
controversial show at the Jewish Museum earlier this year. A
significant part of the appeal of Krystufek's work lies precisely in
how she succeeds in weaving such a diverse array of topics into the
tapestry of her work.
In the Museum of Technology, Electrics, and Electronics, a broken
fax/answering machine, two kitchen clocks (both running late),
several worn out wrist watches, a mechanical type writer (a piece of
paper describing the theft of the artist's laptop still in it), and
assorted other items are scattered throughout the gallery, making use
of the unique possibilities offered by Acconci's design. These items
trace the connection between Krystufek, the human artifact, and the
technological world at large, whose objects, once acquired, ever so
quickly wear out or become obsolete. It is no accident that
Krystufek raises this issue in Kenny Schachter's conTEMPorary, whose
very architecture invites the visitor to ponder similarly disquieting
questions with respect to art itself.
OPENING RECEPTION SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 8, 4-7PM
Kenny Schachter ConTEMPorary
14 Charles Lane, NYC 10014
212 807-6669 f. 645-0743