This Jackie. The artist created a series of silver paintings - the link to Warhol becomes apparent - peopled with images based on publicity shots, film stills or advertisements In the project space: "Holes and Halos" by Paul Schiek.
Thomas Erben is pleased to present the first solo show of New York
based painter Jason Eberspeaker, a 2006 graduate from Yale's MFA
program. A very strong, promising artist, we have followed his work
over the past three years and have been increasingly thrilled with
expectation and excitement.
For This Jackie, the artist (with his assistant and sister Temple
Eberspeaker) created a series of silver paintings - the link to
Warhol becomes apparent - peopled with images based on publicity
shots, film stills or advertisements, all hovering around the
suggested meeting point of gender. Whereas these visuals were
formalized as per their selection, the subsequent painterly treatment
with such "effects" as overlapping, mirroring or the use of negatives
invests them with latent specificity.
However, at the root of Eberspeaker's practice is constant,
self-reflexive undermining. This leads him to undercut the incipient
specificity of each painting by the homogeneity of their size, which,
then again, is subverted by their placement in deliberate groupings
with one isolated "Jackie," alone on a mauve wall - an intervention
into the mechanics of the exhibition itself.
There is a hermaphroditic bent in Eberspeaker's work; whereas, in
theory, a hermaphrodite, being simultaneously male and female, should
not need another gender for procreation, an outside agent is
nevertheless essential. The idea of this showing is that the
structure of the exhibition itself, combined with the subject matter
of the paintings, becomes an inseminated space of androgynous
critique.
Previously, Eberspeaker's work was successfully included in An Inch
of Truth, a group show at the gallery (Fall 2006). He has also
participated in exhibitions at Yale University and in Smoke and
Mirrors at China Art Objects, Los Angeles (2006). He was born in 1980
in Grand Rapids, Michigan.
In the project space, Oakland based Paul Schiek exhibits photo works,
collectively titled "Holes and Halos", his first East Coast
appearance.
Shot in b/w, the actual making of the images is not as important to
Schiek as is their editing and sequencing, which often results in the
placement of several images on one sheet. Viewed together, their
installation creates a blanketing effect that runs the spectrum of
human emotions. Recurrent motifs are anthropomorphized trees,
physical interactions, water and, generally, the tension between
light and dark. In this language of opposites, Schiek finds the
building blocks of a practical truth; a reminder that all life
follows the same path: genesis of form then decay, and, in between,
seemingly random alternation between isolation and community. In
fact, at the opening, in order to further his constructive sense of
human association, Schiek plans to make available newsprints with
images of his work so that everyone can take home a tangible work of
art.
Born 1977 in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, Paul Schiek earned his BFA from
the California College of the Arts in 2005. His work was shown in the
traveling exhibition Beautiful Losers: Contemporary Art and Street
Culture organized by the Contemporay Arts Center, Cincinnati, OH
(2004/05). Lawrence Rinder included him in a recent showing of
graduates (2007) and he has participated in numerous group
exhibitions including at the Stephen Wirtz Gallery, San Francisco,
and the Oakland Museum of California.
Opening reception: Thursday, February 7, from 6 - 8:30
Thomas Erben Gallery
516 West 20th Street - New York
Gallery hours: Tuesday - Saturday, 10-6
Free admission