Brock Enright
JSG Boggs
Reid Speed
Yoshua Okon
Nin Brudermann
Constant
Sue de Beer
Mark Sarosi
Vibeke Jensen
Erik Stein
Bill Brown
Jeremy Hobbs
Rebecca Uchill
Mark Sarosi
Seeking Security in an Unstable World. A two-part survey of young artists at Priska C. Juschka Fine Art, each organized by a separate pair of guest curators. Through an investigation into the structures and methods of social control, both exhibitions will investigate new and novel formulas of transgression.
Seeking Security in an Unstable World
curated by Rebecca Uchill and Mark Sarosi
Works By:
Brock Enright, JSG Boggs, Reid Speed, Yoshua Okon,
Nin Brudermann,Constant, Sue de Beer, Mark Sarosi, Vibeke
Jensen,
Erik Stein, Bill Brown, Jeremy Hobbs
NO, TRESPASSING inaugurates a two-part survey of
young artists at Priska C. Juschka Fine Art, each
organized by a separate pair of guest curators.
Through an investigation into the structures and
methods of social control, both exhibitions will
investigate new and novel formulas of
transgression. For its part, NO, TRESPASSING
focuses on the hybrid notion of security and
violation, posing a series of questions: In this age
of Homeland Security and Nanny-Cams, do icons of
security ameliorate or exacerbate fear? What role
does society's fascination with violence play in its
longing for safety? When does the quest to defend
freedom transgress on civil rights?
The artists in NO, TRESPASSING explore the
psychological apparatus of safety and its violation
through a multidisciplinary program of video,
sculpture, photography and performance. Artist
Brock Enright styles custom kidnappings for paying
patrons. On display are the "products," sculptural
artifacts of the kidnapping experience. J.S.G.
Boggs questions the currency of cash by
appropriating its image in the tradition of trompe
l'oeil paintings. He has been extensively
investigated by the U.S. Secret Service for his
subversive use of the dollar bill.
Sue De Beer's work demonstrates the juxtaposition of
naïveté and violence in youth culture via the
phenomenon of American school-shooters. Vibeke
Jensen, having recently exhibited her second solo
museum show in her native Norway, presents
observations of security from two separate angles:
Blind Spot allows viewers to examine each other
surreptitiously, and her Gun Shots photographs
presents the tension between beauty and violence.
The process behind Jeremy Hobbs's light box image --
photo paper exposed by electricity arcing through a
firearm -- similarly transforms an instrument of
violence into a startlingly delicate pattern.
Bill Brown has won notoriety for his walking tours
of heavily surveilled neighborhoods and his
performances, with the Surveillance Camera Players,
for hidden cameras in public places. For this
exhibition, he created his first surveillance-camera
map of Brooklyn and will conduct two tours of
surveilled Williamsburg on June 7 and 22, both at 2
PM. Constant is a video artist and the host/curator
of the open-forum television show Snack on Art.
Revolution on Video Tape employs his poetic
reconfiguration of language and symbolism by
converting a famous civil-rights era lyric for new
technologies and new video generations.
Mark Sarosi's video/sculptural installation
Panopticon isolates the nervousness and
self-consciousness that are the byproducts of
increased security. Reid Speed's series of
abstracted street and airport photographs
demonstrates the literal and metaphoric chains that
attempt to discipline urban chaos.
Nin Brudermann, for her photographs, traveled to
remote islands with a history of biological or
munitions testing and which have subsequently been
designated off-limits to human visitors. Erik Stein
uses graffiti iconography in an investigation of
transgression and its relationship to genuine
emotion. Mexican artist Yoshua Okon scrutinizes the
authority granted to the guardians of society. In
his videos and photography, he places various police
officers and security guards in positions that draw
attention to that authority, demonstrating its
constructedness with both humor and dismay.
June 6, 2003 - July 7, 2003
Opening: Friday June 6, 2003, 7-10pm
Gallery Hours:Thursday - Monday:
12
to 6pm. and by appointment.
Bill Brown's Tour of surveilled Williamsburg on
Saturday June 7 and June 22 at 2 PM
Priska Juschka Fine Art
97 North 9th Street, (Berry Street
& Wythe Ave.) Brooklyn, NY 11211
T: 718 782-4100 F: 718 782-4800