Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac - Marais
Paris
7, rue Debelleyme
+33 142729900 FAX +33 142726166
WEB
Two exhibitions
dal 23/11/2010 al 23/12/2010
tuesday-saturday 10am-7pm

Segnalato da

Alessandra Bellavita


approfondimenti

Cory Arcangel
Ali Banisadr



 
calendario eventi  :: 




23/11/2010

Two exhibitions

Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac - Marais, Paris

Cory Arcangel's exhibition, titled "Image is Everything" includes works mainly in the classic genres of sculpture and painting. Two series shown in Paris, consisting of computer-generated works, could be called "digital ready-mades." Evidence: in the new works on paper by Ali Banisadr he brings together print making, drawing and painting. He brings to life his figures and landscapes, inspired by Persian miniature, and combines them with more abstract images.


comunicato stampa

Cory Arcangel
Image is Everything

Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to announce young American artist Cory Arcangel’s fourth solo exhibition. Born in Buffalo (NY) in 1978, Arcangel has built up an international reputation since 2004 with his innovative performances, videos and computer-generated projections.
In Paris, we are showing Arcangel's second exhibition, which includes works mainly in the classic genres of sculpture and painting. This coincides with his solo exhibition Cory Arcangel – Here Comes Everybody at the Nationalgalerie im Hamburger Bahnhof Berlin, open from 30 November 2010 until 1 May 2011.

The title Image is Everything is that of the 1991 advertising campaign mounted by Andre Agassi for the Canon camera company. Arcangel explains, "The Canon campaign became so all encompassing that it actually ended up overshadowing Agassiʼs tennis career during that time. I recently got really into his 90s and late 80s phase and therefore started searching for artifacts on eBay from that era of his career. Agassiʼs style during that time - ripped denim, neon, and faded pastels color - influenced the works in the show. [...] a lot of my works start from similar vague interests..."

The impartiality with which Arcangel perceives software, hardware and Internet resources as raw art materials, placing them in new contexts, reveals a completely novel style. In the mid-2000s, he became well known particularly through his practice of archaeology in historical computer technology of the 1980s, while in recent years he has expanded his repertoire of art material and digital sources.

Two series shown in Paris, consisting of computer-generated works, could be called "digital ready-mades." These are the sculptures from the CNC Wire Form Product Demonstration series and the photographically produced C-prints from the Photoshop Product Demonstration series. The Wire Forms, arrangements of metal rods shaped by a robot and then powder-coated, are based on a computer program developed by the artist to produce random forms. Their appeal lies in their being computer-generated yet at the same time shaped using analogue techniques, like a classic sculpture. The Gradients, by contrast, are based on pre-set patterns from the graphics software Photoshop. The artist can determine the composition with a single click of the mouse, each click forming the title of the work, and he provides precise instructions for the user to produce such pictures.

In the installation Since U Been Gone..., which consists of a CD player and 48 CDs, the artist experiments with a system and genealogy used in a special, currently popular "Punk Pop Top 40 Music," which he sees as ideally embodied in Kelly Clarkson's Since U Been Gone. An arrangement of 48 CDs enables Arcangel to reconstruct the influences from the music of the past 50 years which led to this and similar hits. The work is interactive, and the viewer can listen to the CDs, although the artist regards the installation primarily as a sculpture.

Arcangel's series of Kinetic Sculptures, groups of Dancing Stands often found in cheap electronics stores, and the Sport Products, Oakley sunglasses cast in bronze, refer to an era of 1990s design which was followed shortly afterwards by that of Steve Jobs' sleek iPods. The Kinetic Sculptures, a kind of "cheap and tacky Sol LeWitt," according to the artist, also pose the question of why the canon of art history has largely discarded kinetic sculpture, and how far the canonization of high culture is determined by changing tastes and fashions.

The ageing process of technologies is of course a central theme in Arcangel's work, but he nevertheless does not see himself purely as a nostalgist. Rather, he looks at the way people smile indulgently at past fashions and technologies as a basic characteristic of human behavior. "I think maybe in retrospect [about old technologies] we realize our lack of perspective. And this of course doesn’t just have to do with technology but it extends to fashion and culture in general. How could we have dressed like that? How could we have thought that way? What once seemed all encompassing now has no value. It’s, I guess, one of those quirks of human existence," says Arcangel.

In the series Timeless Standards, Arcangel illustrates how the iconography of one of the most important 20th-century artists is transferred into the world of design and commerce and then taken back by the artist into the sphere of art. Last year, the Lacoste firm was selling polo shirts clearly inspired by Roy Lichtenstein. Arcangel decided to bring back the Lichtenstein motif into the White Cube, by scanning the shirts, printing out the scans and applying them on to Comtex, a type of flat board. The floor installation Skipping Stones is to be seen in a similar context; here FLOR textile tiles are laid to form a structure resembling a classic sculpture by Carl André. The exhibition includes a new video installation, There’s Always One at Every Party, for which Arcangel has collected all the scenes from Seinfeld (one of the most influential American 1990s sitcoms) in which Kramer talks about his Coffee Table Book about Coffee Tables. Here Arcangel uses the "supercut" technique (a popular internet genre), where thematically linked scenes copied from a film are strung together. In this idea of a Coffee Table Book about Coffee Tables, he sees a phenomenon with parallels in conceptual art. "What I’m interested in is to me to mix this online vernacular style and Seinfeld, and then place the whole thing back into a fine art context," explains the artist.

It is rare for an artist of the youngest generation to receive such concentrated attention from distinguished cultural institutions. In 2004, works by Arcangel were already being shown in the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Royal Academy of Art, London, at the Liverpool Biennial, in the Whitney Museum of Art, New York and the Guggenheim Museum, New York. In 2005, the Migros Museum, Zurich held a comprehensive solo exhibition of his work. In 2008, he participated in the exhibition Color Chart: Reinventing Color, 1950 to Today in the New York Museum of Modern Art. This year, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Miami and the University of Michigan Museum of Art mounted solo exhibitions, to be followed in 2011 by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York and the Barbican Gallery, London.

For further information regarding the exhibition, please contact Renaud Pillon, renaud@ropac.net or Arne Ehmann, arne.ehmann@ropac.at.

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Ali Banisadr
Evidence

Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to announce an exhibition by Iranian-born, New York-based artist Ali Banisadr. After his highly successful show of paintings at the gallery in February 2010, we will present a new series of works on paper for the first time under the title Evidence in the Drawing Space.

In these new works on paper Banisadr brings together print making, drawing and painting by using a variety of mediums such as watercolor, pastel, pencil and ink. He brings to life his figures and landscapes, inspired by Persian miniature, and combines them with more abstract images. Banisadr’s drawings should not be seen as studies or sketches for his paintings, but as autonomous visual explorations of color, depth and layered narratives.

Those familiar with the semi-abstract style of his paintings with plunging views of crowded activities will recognize the sense of sound and movement emanating from Banisadr’s imagery. However in his paintings the artist condenses his imagined scenarios, whereas in his works on paper, parts of scenes seem to unfold before us linearly, as if unrolled from a film negative. “Within these repeated images, I hope the viewer will get a chance to investigate the scenes, like a forensic scientist discovering some long forgotten roll of film from the past,” explains Banisadr.

Ali Banisadr was born in Tehran in 1976 and moved to California with his family when he was a child. He attended the New York School of Visual Arts where he first displayed his work in an exhibition entitled In Exile in 2005 and then went to the New York Academy of Art. He now lives and works in New York. Recent group exhibitions include Raad o Bargh: 17 Iranian Artists at Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac in Paris (2009), Unveiled: New Art from the Middle East at the Saatchi Gallery in London (2009) and Weaving the Common Thread at the Queens Museum of Art, New York (2008). His work is included in the exhibition, Hareng Saur: Ensor and Contemporary Art at the SMAK in Ghent, Belgium (31 October - 27 February 2011).

For further information, please contact Victoire de Pourtales, victoire@ropac.net.

Image: Cory Arcangel, Old Friends, 2005, Projection from a digital source, variable dimensions

For press inquiries, please contact Alessandra Bellavita, alessandra@ropac.net.
To obtain visual elements, please contact Zahra Khozeimeh-Alam, zahra@ropac.net.

Opening in the presence of the artists on Wednesday, November 24th from 6:30pm to 8:30pm

Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac
7 rue Debelleyme, Paris
Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-7pm
Admission free

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