Social Arrangements
Social Arrangements
Petropoulos has for ten years exhibited single
projects. In this exhibition, Social
Arrangements, she is bringing together
components of five ongoing projects each defined by
particular aesthetics and conceptual choices with
each informed by the other. Painting, sculpture and
audio are presented to question perceptions of the
world and create a direct interaction with the viewer.
Through various objects and extensive sound
recordings and transmissions; Petropoulos creates
an environment that weaves together history and
physical experience. She poses questions regarding
the representation of ideas and the repetition of
historical practice and narrative. Cinema, fables and
reportage contribute to her narrative constructions.
Abstaction is employed in several manifestations
including the use of cartography and mass produced
building materials. Displacement as an idea
underlies much of this work.
Entering the gallery two large "plaid" flags and a
grouping of black and white paintings line the walls.
The paintings are in fact portraits or representations of
countries in two states - one at the present time and
one within conversational memory. The flags refer to
a journey through several countries that is continued
in the large paintings in the next gallery. They also
flank the office of the gallery .
In the next gallery, a fixed object such as a painting is
catapulted into the position of a time-based work
through the precise construction of a 'soundtrack'. In
the two large paintings, "Trip Through the Gulf States
(by air)" and "Trip From Sri Lanka to Zanzibar (by
boat)", soundtracks recall a particular journey as the
viewer physically moves from speaker to speaker
(hanging above the painting) forming a new narrative
via the movement and choice of the viewer. Sounds of
the Arabian Nights, Tales of Zanzibar, The History of
Tipu Tip and the song Mustapha are among the
accounts of travels and living that move through the
gallery. Accompanying the paintings are
seating/reclining arrangements placed in the center of
the room with headsets creating an opportunity for a
prolonged viewing and audio experience that is
pronounced from the live audio filing the room.
In the adjacent gallery two woven sculptures lie flat
just off the floor spanning the length of the room.
These works resembling rugs create a perceptual
shift in the physical act of walking by altering the
viewers spatial relationship to that simple act. These
works are based on a 'walking path" in a city. One is
referring to a pastoral waking path in the central park
of Berlin and the other to an urban interior walkway in
central London.
In the final gallery space, 19 watercolors painted on
water resistant paper feature the artists pre-
occupation with mass-produced architectural details
(such as cinderblocks, iron work, bricks, etc.). These
tiny works take up the 19th century convention
of "tourist" watercolors, which currently takes the form
of the "snap shot" photograph. Observation via
photography of visited locations and film are observed
through the course of the artists' routine activity.
Selection, comparison and routine suggested through
the close scrutiny of overlooked details brings to mind
the conflicted efforts of colonialism and
personalization.
The questions Petropoulos poses take us through
history and contemporary action: through systems of
belief and their representations. The similarities and
difference are set in a relief in which form can never be
separate from content. Labor can never depart from
action.
Although there might be an appearance of something
official on the surface, it is quickly understood that
each project questions the position and authority of
the situation.
Petropoulos has recently completed projects in
several areas and cities of the world including El
Salvador, London, Berlin and Oaxaca. Her publication
Nearly Ten Months has just been released 9 with an
essay by Annetta Kapon. For release this fall the
publication Is It Possible with text by Chris Kraus.
For more information please contact Lucrecia Roa at 310.828.8488
Reception: July 7th, 5–7pm
Rosamund Felsen Gallery
2525 Michigan Ave., B4 Santa Monica Los Angeles, CA
Gallery hours are 10-5:30, Tuesday-Saturday.
Admission free