Adrian Piper, Eric Baudelaire, Josephine Meckseper and Wayne Gonzales. The exhibition centers around two generations of artists, both American and European, who will present their work in autonomous ways inside the space.
Adrian Piper, Eric Baudelaire, Josephine Meckseper and Wayne Gonzales
Elizabeth Dee is pleased to present the four person exhibition of works by: Adrian
Piper, Eric Baudelaire, Josephine Meckseper and Wayne Gonzales which will open on
Saturday, November 4th at the gallery and run through December 23rd, 2006. An
opening reception for the artists will be held Saturday, November 4th from 6:00 to
8:00 PM.
This exhibition centers around two generations of artists, both American and
European, who will present their work in autonomous ways inside the space. After the
events of 2001 and the beginning of the Iraq War in particular, we have increasingly
seen a prevalence of socio-political imagery used as material in the appropriation
of form, manipulation, social documentation and translation. To subjugate,
personalize, infuse meaning, or question social protocols both points to forthcoming
practices and also directly references artists from previous generations who have
always played a role in subversive action and philosophical reflection.
The gallery is honored to present four works from Adrian Piper’s most recent
series which are being exhibited for the first time. Since the late 1960’s, Adrian
Piper’s history has always utilized representation, political dissonances and
discourses relating to ethnicity and gender in appropriated images and writings from
a wide variety of recent and historical sources. The ongoing series entitled
Everything, begun in 2003, employs a single text,
Everything will be taken away
as a constant that is permuted in a variety of media and contexts. The four works
exhibited are from Everything #2, which uses photography, photocopying, offset
printing and erasure on personal photographs taken by the artist. The permanent
repetition of the phrase is crucial to the series. In every work/context the
sentence develops a different aspect of its possible meanings and thus enlarges the
scope of the viewers’ individual reflection upon it. These works are poetic and
philosophical in their relationship to Piper’s writings and philosophical work.
Eric Baudelaire’s The Dreadful Details interrogates the form of the war image in
this age of saturation. Adopting the mode of a fresco, in a 7 x 12 foot photographic
diptych, the composition expresses the crisis of what Gilles Deleuze called “the
image-action," emphasizing the extent to which the war image can no longer convey
the slightest “grand form" but only multiply poisonous cliche's - ready made
images devoid of affect because they are already known and pre-digested, present
both within us (as blurry and overwhelming memories) and in front of us (as worn out
images in magazines and advertising) thus rendering obsolete any distinction between
interior and exterior, the spirit and the world around us, between us and them,
actors and spectators.
This title, The Dreadful Details, which refers to the caption of one of the earliest
photographs of a battle field, shot during the American civil war by Alexander
Gardner and Timothy O'Sullivan, proposes a form of ethical response to the issue of
war image’s over abundance: it is precisely where there are too many blinding
images/cliche's that we must introduce a picture capable of showing us how to see
once again. And so the piece accepts Deleuze’s challenge and proposes a form that
“lets an image emerge from all the cliche's" by fully integrating the
inescapably iconic nature of war images in a dialogue, or mirror game, inside of the
piece through its construction.
Josephine Meckseper’s important series of photographs of Iraq War demonstrations
held in Berlin (2002) entitled Berlin Demonstration 1, will be shown in their
entirety for the first time in New York (and concurrently in the Seville Biennial,
at Foundation BIACS, Seville through January 8). This body of work shot on location
is foreboding of the fragility of Europe’s status within the current political
situation, while reminiscent of earlier moments of crisis and social instability of
European statehood (specifically Germany’s). These works offer a new view into the
artist’s ideas that have inspired recent films and subsequent photographic works.
This work is reminiscent of the fall of the Berlin wall, of earlier wars, the
protest culture of the 1960’s, riot gear, tear gas and destruction from the chaos
and anarchy of public gatherings. Here they are re-presented in this non-narrative
and iconic photographic series.
Wayne Gonzales uses photographic sources and downloaded images from the internet as
reference points to historical and contemporary events in his paintings. His works
have referred to individual figures from American history as well as to symbols of
American power, both institutional and private: the White House, the Pentagon, and
real estate development in the form of upscale restaurants and resorts. A variety of
techniques rooted in the commercial arts and Pop Art usually mask the artist’s
intent and manipulation of his appropriated sources, but are used here to produce
some of the most aggressively political art he has made as well: political posters,
images of politicians draped in the flag, and advertisements, some of which have not
been shown before. Gonzales will contribute a mixture of paintings and works on
paper, an indexical selection of works from the last five years and a virtual time
capsule of dissent in the Bush era.
Elizabeth Dee Gallery
545 W 20th Street - New York