Swimming. Based on black-and-white and color photographs sourced from 1950s and 60s scouting manuals and magazines as well as found film footage, Gutierrez's appropriated images from this bygone era further underscore a sense of ambiguity and ephemerality.
Abel Baker Gutierrez's work explores the way images acquire different meaning over time and the overlapping systems that shape perceptions about the archetypal male. Taking inspiration from rock music's aesthetic trends to Scout culture and Old Master paintings, Gutierrez utilizes a diverse range of source material to create paintings, photographs, sculpture and video installations loaded with potential interpretations. His recent work reflects upon society's obsession with youth culture, issues of "growing up", and ideals of masculinity, yet these subjects are negotiated through a visual vocabulary that effectively blurs the distinction between social critique and melancholic nostalgia.
Gutierrez's newest body of work, presented in this series titled "Swimming", is comprised of oil paintings and a video installation that looks to Scouting culture and the Realist traditions of bathers (e.g., Courbet, Millet) for point of reference. Inspired by painters such as Thomas Eakins and Joaquin Sorolla y Bastida, who painted adolescent figures engaged in outdoor activities during the Victorian era, Gutierrez's own subjects are decontextualized from a specific temporal or social scenario - unaware of the contemporary viewer's idealizing, eroticizing, and prejudicial gaze. This complicity of the physical, perceptual, and philosophical - classical painterly techniques, art historical references, and 20th century Scout ideologies - operate as an inquiry into the complex structures of masculine hegemony (issues dealing with learning and performing gender; definitions of masculine behavior), ideas about continuity, and prompts the viewer to reevaluate his or her position in ever-shifting social constructs.
Based on black-and-white and color photographs sourced from 1950s and 60s scouting manuals and magazines as well as found film footage, Gutierrez's appropriated images from this bygone era further underscore a sense of ambiguity and ephemerality. Intimately scaled and emotionally charged, his new work portrays slight and languid figures set against an atmosphere of peril. Using contrasting layers of thin and dark glazes, loosely rendered figures of young men and boys occupy amorphous bodies of water, build rafts, and demonstrate rescue breathing techniques. Evoking a sense of the uncanny, the figures are removed from their original context through the ritual of brushstroke, and in the case of his video, digitization. In the video, a found color film excerpt of boys playing is transformed into a slow moving and haunting silvery digital specter.
Abel Baker Gutierrez was born in California and earned his BFA (2009) and MFA (2011) at the California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, CA. Gutierrez's work has been included in numerous group exhibitions in California, including "Back to the Future", Think Tank, Los Angeles; "Keeper of Light", Sandroni Rey Gallery, Culver City; "A Picnic in Eden" (as part of a collaborative project with artist Bettina Hubby), The Company, Los Angeles; "Playing Dumb", Amy Adler's Studio, Los Angeles; as well as "L.A. Napoli", Cercle Blanc Gallery, Berlin. He lives and works in Los Angeles.
For further information, please call 310-453-7773 or email gallery@luisdejesus.com.
Image: © Abel Baker Gutierrez
Opening: 23 July 2011 - 17:00
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
2525 Michigan Avenue, F2, Santa Monica, CA 90404
HOURS: Tuesday - Saturday, 10am - 6pm, and by appointment
free admission