White Columns
New York
320 West 15th Street
212 9244212 FAX 212 6454764
WEB
Random Order
dal 9/5/2003 al 15/6/2003
212.924.4212 FAX 212.645.4764
WEB
Segnalato da

White columns


approfondimenti

Lauren Ross



 
calendario eventi  :: 




9/5/2003

Random Order

White Columns, New York

Abstract work that combines the use of a set formula or equation with a random or uncontrolled element. In abstract paintings and drawings, the emerging artists in this exhibition explore various systems including mathematics (geometry and physics); information and communication (language and computer code); and biology (neurological systems and memory).


comunicato stampa

curated by Lauren Ross

Random Order presents abstract work that combines the use of a set formula or equation with a random or uncontrolled element. In abstract paintings and drawings, the emerging artists in this exhibition explore various systems including mathematics (geometry and physics); information and communication (language and computer code); and biology (neurological systems and memory). While basing their work in such structured arrangements, they exert their individuality in various ways; through the use of personal invention and variations on the norm, showing the evidence of the path of the hand, or embracing the truly random. By questioning the apparent dichotomy of the knowable vs. haphazard, these artists follow the model of chaos theory that finds pattern in frenzied experience. All share a creative process in which they operate within predetermined specifications, simultaneously respecting the rules and testing the limits of their self-inflicted terms.

Marc Brotherton shows paintings from his "Encoded Plug-In" series, based on plug-ins designed for use on the web. Inventing his own form of coded language, Brotherton often includes messages in the work, secretly present but indecipherable to the viewer. Henry Brown's paintings are each based on a single numerical formula, whose plotted points and lines remain visible after the paint is applied. With a stark simplicity, their compositions play with geometric forms and illusionistic recession of space. Jennifer Dailey makes freehand drawings of gridded dots joined by connecting lines. This network of forms serves as a metaphor for individuals linked by societal structure, while the repetitive gestures in her work serve as a record of the passage of time. Pamela Harris draws in pastel and charcoal with a single gestural mark, repeated over and over again. She sees the resulting abstractions as mirroring various systems, including neurological processes. Karla Hoepfner's drawings are composed of two basic layers: the first carefully charts formulas from such sources as quantum physics and probability theory. Above this is a second layer, applied in a manner completely out of the artist's control; splattered paint that has been thrown into the air and allowed to land on the paper. Tohru Kanayama presents small works on paper that are created digitally by layering approximately 60 normal keyboard characters on top of one another, and then using additional software features to further abstract the overlapping images. The process is essentially blind, as the artist does not know how the piece will look until the final activation of the "merge" function. John J. O'Connor makes drawings that obsessively plot data and systems, ranging from hair loss and weather patterns to language. Two large drawings in this exhibition explore a common theme in O'Connor's work: memory loss. Taney Roniger shows paintings from the "Concatenations" series, based on strings of linked or connected things. Small holes punched into the iridescent surfaces of painted panels form abstract patterns that resemble computer circuit boards as well as chromosomal strands. Roland Thompson paints on geometrically shaped aluminum grounds. Using single uninterrupted lines, his paint strokes begin on the perimeter and then spiral in on themselves. Thompson values the deviations that inevitably occur in his attempt to mimic a prescripted shape.

WHITE ROOMS (solo exhibitions for artists unaffiliated with a New York gallery):

Charley Friedman works in diverse media, including photography, sculpture, video and live performance. Grounded in the artist's own personal experiences and relationships, his work combines unusual or startling images and humorous materials. For his White Room, Friedman fills the gallery with an all-encompassing environment made of eggs which have been emptied and shellacked with resin, some caked with dried yolk. These eggshells are arranged to form gracefully undulating daisies which seem to grow wildly from the gallery floor and cover the walls. The installation rides the borders between nature and artifice, beauty and repugnance, existence and demise. Friedman has had solo exhibitions at the Queens Museum of Art (2002) and CRP Inc., NY (1998) and has been in group shows at such venues as Hallwalls, Buffalo (2003) and PS1 (2002). His work has been shown at White Columns in two group exhibitions, Face Value 2002) and Posers (2000). Friedman received his MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and Tufts University, Boston and his BFA from Macalester College in St. Paul, MN.

A.J. Bocchino installs a selection of dozens of photographs taken over the past six years . Without searching for a particular subject, Bocchino photographs objects and places of interest, sometimes returning repeatedly to the same site to record its changes over time. While the artist originally did not intend to show the photographs as a group, common formal and conceptual threads between the pieces made him decide to present them as an installation. He cites these reoccurring themes as "the passage of time, fluidity of context and meaning, a focus on transformation, and the accidental and undiscovered." Bocchino works in other two- and three-dimensional media, including wood and glass sculpture and digital drawing. He has had a solo exhibition at Urban Glass Factory in Brooklyn (2002) and holds a MFA from Tyler School of Art and a BFA from Tulane University.

hours: wednesday - sunday, 12-6 pm

White Columns
320 west 13th street
new york
tel 212.924.4212
fax 212.645.4764

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