Plus Ultra Gallery
New York
637 West 27th Street, Suite A
212 6433152 FAX 212 6432040
WEB
Christopher Johnson
dal 18/3/2004 al 19/4/2004
7183873844
WEB
Segnalato da

Edward Winkleman


approfondimenti

Christopher Johnson



 
calendario eventi  :: 




18/3/2004

Christopher Johnson

Plus Ultra Gallery, New York

In this powerful new series of painting, Johnson expands his exploration of the inherent bankruptcy within material and spiritual excess. Focused again on a very American sense of desire, he has broadened his investigation to include our role in recent global events.


comunicato stampa

The crowd was mute and moveless

opening reception: friday, mar 19, 2004, 7 - 9 pm

Plus Ultra is very pleased to present “The Crowd Was Mute and Moveless,” our second solo exhibition by New York artist Christopher Johnson. In this powerful new series of painting, Johnson expands his exploration of the inherent bankruptcy within material and spiritual excess. Focused again on a very American sense of desire, he has broadened his investigation to include our role in recent global events. Viewed through Johnson’s distinctive co-opting of pan-art-historical allegory and approaches to painting, the crossroads where America’s vulnerability intersects with our hunger for abundance provide a rich source for this provocative critique.

The large canvases in this exhibition vary greatly in tone, density, and style, quoting from Rococo painting, fairy tales, rock music imagery, epic poetry, and popular culture. This disparity of motifs emphasizes the wish that they not be read as one statement, but that they reflect the complexity and inconsistencies within the world’s current state of affairs. “The Crowd was Mute and Moveless,” is a quote from a poem by Shelley, and, although whether Johnson’s critique is read as “Romantic” falls to the individual viewer, he does reference the Romantic’s fascination with Middle Eastern themes and textures.

Commanding attention among the paintings is “Crusader,” an intense and colorful work based on the “I Dream of Jeanie” TV show. Set in the plush magic bottle dwelling of the title character (a native of Baghdad), “Crusader” presents a moment of surprise as a group of Nativity figurines comes to live and unleashes a muscular blue genie from his bottle. A young American man—playing with the Arab figurines and American toy soldiers, while virtually drowning in the pool of treasures around him—and the friendly, iconographic Jeanie fall back, astonished at the sudden intrusion of this idealized character into their domestic drama. In “Idle Beauty,” a nude woman stands innocently at the foot of a large strong tree in which dozens of bizarre characters are busily draining it of sap. Even a huge rock nearby is assaulted and tapped for the valued resources it contains. Seemingly unaware of what is happening around her, the woman dreamily contemplates some small object in her hands. And dream-like, somewhat sleepy expressions on the Seven Dwarves (and an odd assortment of others) in “The Grape Heap” betray the encroaching peril as they’re buried under a mountain of luscious fruit. Out head of the juicy heap, an ostensibly ambivalent Snow White holds an apple she’s eaten down to the core. And in the airy “Intoxicated Crusader (After Tiepolo),” based on the 18th Century artist’s depiction of “Rinaldo Enchanted by Armida, the updated seductress reclines on a mount of treasure, apparently complicit with the forces she’s supposedly fighting against. Rinaldo remains transfixed by his own reflection, while Disney-esque bluebirds lift his lover’s flowing skirt to reveal odd characters cavorting underneath.

In the image:fancy, 2001, oil on canvas.

gallery hours: friday thru monday, 12 to 6 or by appointment

plus ultra gallery
235 south 1st street
brooklyn, ny 11211
718-387-3844

IN ARCHIVIO [22]
Boyce Cummings
dal 29/11/2006 al 5/1/2007

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