Combing the commercial landscape for product detritus and two-dimensional media, Copeland guts and recombines found materials into psychotropic Pop assemblages.
Jack Hanley Gallery is very pleased to present our third solo exhibition by Bjorn Copeland. Combing the commercial landscape for product detritus and two-dimensional media, Copeland guts and recombines found materials into psychotropic Pop assemblages. His material gestures range from subtle manipulations of image or lettering to jarring repetition of pattern and hyper-saturated color. Leaving the skeletal remains of the commodity form, Copeland reclaims the “potential” of the object - a term or concept he often uses in his titles - revealing it as if in a state of growth or flux.
Copeland founded the experimental noise-rock band Black Dice while studying at RISD almost two decades ago. A crossing of audio and visual ways of thinking have become almost second nature to him; when thinking of Pop, it is with Paolozzi-style collages, DIY record covers, 50’s rock and roll and contemporary electronic beats in mind. While consistently pushing toward sensory overload in each discipline, Copeland is able to achieve a remarkable balance between rigid, repetitive elements and more free-form, organic noise.
Bjorn Copeland has shown nationally and internationally, with exhibitions at PS1 Contemporary Art Center, D’amelio Terras, Daniel Reich and the Gagosian Gallery in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago, Galerie Frank Elbaz in Paris, France and Jack Hanley Gallery’s San Francisco location. Black Dice have toured extensively since they started playing together in the late nineties. They have performed internationally in several notable cultural institutions such as the MFA Boston, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, the Cartier Foundation in Paris and the Taki Ishii Gallery in Tokyo.
For more information and images, please contact info@jackhanley.com.
Opening Reception on Thursday, September 5, 6-8 pm
Jack Hanley Gallery
136 Watts Street - Tribeca - New York