Robert Mann Gallery (new space)
New York
525 West 26th Street New
212 989 7600 FAX 212 989 2947
WEB
Julie Blackmon
dal 3/9/2014 al 17/10/2014
Tues - Fri 10am-6pm, Sat 11am-6pm

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Robert Mann Gallery


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Julie Blackmon



 
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3/9/2014

Julie Blackmon

Robert Mann Gallery (new space), New York

Free Range. Exhibition


sintesi del comunicato stampa

Robert Mann Gallery is pleased to announce Free Range, Julie Blackmon's third solo exhibition with the gallery. Blackmon's recent body of work, which includes new images that will debut at the exhibition, juxtaposes an enduring sense of nostalgia with keenly contemporary details to twist the artist's signature sly wit into strange, wry, and whimsical stories of family life. Coinciding with the release of her new book, Homegrown, the exhibition opening on September 4th will be accompanied by a book signing. While Blackmon's work has always eschewed the overly sentimental or saccharine, several of her recent pictures delve further into darkness. Set in the same cavernous house against dark-red walls, Hairand Dress Rehearsal invoke shades of sublime as children dance in garish black costumes or hide, only limbs or eyes visible, behind bannisters and doors. Works like Chaise and The Hamster Handbook take the opposite approach, forming dreamscapes of childhood summers through filtered sunlight and suburban backgrounds. As always, however, quotidian quips peek through. Barbie parts lie scattered on Hair's hardwood floor, and the titular Handbook lies amongst toilet paper rolls and re-purposed doll furniture in a hamster's homemade fort. Other images are more direct pokes at our consumer culture. Thin Mints depicts a Girl Scout troop in an Abbey Road-like line eagerly delivering boxes of the eponymous cookies, a wailing younger sister in the back Red Flyer wagon having apparently overindulged. One of Blackmon's very newest works, New Chair, is a glibode to material improvement (direct from FedEx). Yet like all works in Free Range, there is a particular poignancy to the image as well. One young child stands protectively-and protected-behind the dingy old dinosaur, an overstuffed armchair with a "$20" sign scratched on scrap paper. Hair may grow, logos updated, furniture replaced: things change, yet childhood remains touchingly, hilariously, much the same. Opening 4th September from 6 pm to 8 pm. Free Admission.

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