Raid Projects
Los Angeles
602 Moulton Ave.
323 4419593
WEB
Three exhibitions
dal 3/6/2005 al 25/6/2005
3234419593
WEB
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Raid Projects



 
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3/6/2005

Three exhibitions

Raid Projects, Los Angeles

Gridlock: an exhibition of contemporary manifestations of the grid. Rather like a ghost at the feast high modernism's regular grid is a hovering presence in all of the works included. In Augusta Wood's photographs of for-now-unpeopled places words are inscribed into snow and chalked on sidewalks. One text, spelled out at knee height in magnets on a fridge door, reads 'I'll be alright, but thank you'. Emilio Garcia explores that which is 'non-excess' to both the traveler and to his sculptures.


comunicato stampa

Gridlock: works by Jeremy Kidd, John Lyon and Christine Morla in the Main Gallery

Augusta Wood: in the Project Room

Artist-in-Residence Emilio Garcia: Non-Excess Baggage in the North Gallery

'Gridlock': an exhibition of contemporary manifestations of the grid. Rather like a ghost at the feast high modernism's regular grid is a hovering presence in all of the works included. But, if the modernist grid was a eulogy to flatness that simultaneously asserted some stable (if chilly) universal structure, then these works propose a more complex configuration of coordinates. Here right angles often wilt, spaces bulge like so many well-fed stomachs and horizons multiply. Having invited the specter to sit down and talk, Kidd, Lyon and Morla engage in a trio of cross-referencing conversations with the old ghost that are by turns pithy, analytical, flirtatious and challenging.

Jeremy Kidd's recent works have asserted the existence of a universal intelligence that, contrary to the supposedly disinterested force represented by the grid, expresses itself as aberrations in the regular surface patterns of our built environments. With his new body of digitally manipulated photographs this disorderly and desiring 'natural force' has become equated with human subjective perception. Containing up to one hundred thirty-second exposures Kidd's images of subtly distorted and multiplied landmarks are 'fictional realities' - expressions of the ways in which perception interprets, processes and accumulates impressions of experience. Kidd's extensive exhibition record includes UFO at the University of Colorado and tour, Pop Surrealism at the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art, CT; and shows at the Laguna Art Museum, CA; Littlejohn Contemporary, NY; and the Caroline Wiseman Gallery, London.

Inspired by the clan history of Scotland and the distinctive tartans that designate each familial grouping, John Lyon's rich plaid paintings take on the grid as both functional entity and narrative structure. At the same time, by distorting the plaid and curving its regimented lines, he causes the space between the lines to swell. That which familiarity indicates should be flat - the tartan pattern - and that which is known to be flat - the painted surface - begin to undulate under the influence of illusion. A recent graduate of Claremont Graduate School, Lyon has shown his work at the Rhode Island School of Design, Chicago's Labotomy Gallery and Concrete Walls in Los Angeles.

Referencing traditional crafts and children's pastimes Christine Morla's vibrantly-colored woven paper and palm fronds 'mats' are pinned, taped and glued to the wall. Creating a first impression of over-spilling abundance the paper edges curl off the walls, but underlying the playful profusion is a rigorous structure of warp and weft and a sophisticated and highly selective approach to pattern and color. Morla's work has been presented at venues that include Crazy Space Gallery, Highways Performance Space and Patricia Correia Gallery in Santa Monica; the Armory Northwest in Pasadena and Art Frankfurt, Germany.

In Augusta Wood's photographs of for-now-unpeopled places words are inscribed into snow and chalked on sidewalks. One text, spelled out at knee height in magnets on a fridge door, reads 'I'll be alright, but thank you'. In another toothpaste smeared on a bathroom mirror states 'the search for lost things is hindered by routine habits'. Embedded in Wood's elegant images, which are redolent of Sunday evening reverie, the texts sometimes suggest themselves as thoughts that have been left and lost, sometimes as injunctions whose meanings are rendered both sharp and elusive by an aphoristic poetry.

Placing himself and his work in the context of constant travel Raid Artist In Residence Emilio Garcia explores that which is 'non-excess' to both the traveler and to his sculptures. At once skeletal and fulsomely pod-like Garcia's forms emerge from the artist's experience that, in a peripatetic life, all but the essentials must be shed. Emilio Garcia has previously been a resident at the Vermont Studio Center.

Raid Projects is a non-commercial artist-run project space and curatorial organization that is dedicated to promoting the exchange of cultural products and ideas through various curatorial models on a regional, national and international basis. Every year we host 8 projects in our Los Angeles gallery, 3-5 projects at alternative, commercial, institutional, and/or appropriated spaces world-wide, and a year-round Artist In Residence program.

Image: Augusta Wood

Opening: on Saturday June 4, 7-10pm.

Raid Projects
602 Moulton Ave, Brewery Complex - Los Angeles
Open Saturday, 12-5pm and by arrangement Mon-Fri.

IN ARCHIVIO [35]
Clifford Eberly
dal 12/4/2013 al 17/5/2013

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