Tauba Auerbach
E.V. Day
Jurgen Drescher
Richard Dupont
Spencer Finch
Carsten Holler
Alyson Shotz
Aaron Spangler
Tauba Auerbach, E.V. Day, Jurgen Drescher, Richard Dupont, Spencer Finch, Carsten Holler, Alyson Shotz, and Aaron Spangler. These artists take a systems based approach to their processes or critique the structures and organizations which spread into our lives and communities.
We are pleased to announce the exhibition SYSTEMIC, at Carolina Nitsch Project Room, 534 W. 22nd St, New York. This group show
will feature work by Tauba Auerbach, E.V. Day, Jürgen Drescher, Richard Dupont, Spencer Finch, Carsten Höller, Alyson Shotz, and
Aaron Spangler. These artists take a systems based approach to their processes or, in some cases, critique the structures and
organizations which spread into our lives and communities. As in a “hive mentality” there is also some overlap in the themes, process
and materials that each of these artists utilize. Auerbach, Day, Finch and Shotz take a mathematical approach to their methodology by
multiplying simple forms or concepts into contemplative constructions. Dupont, Drescher, Höller and Spangler offer a critical view of
various systems and collective behavior through history and in contemporary culture.
Tauba Auerbach has created an oversized pop-up book titled [2, 3] (2011), featuring six die-cut paper sculptures that unfold into
wonderful, elaborate forms. Engineered by the artist, each “page” opens into a beautifully constructed object, intricately conceived so
that the large-scale paper works can be collapsed totally flat. The pieces evolve from a range of geometric forms and stand as an
astonishing art-object; part bookwork and part sculpture, and represents an advance in the field of pop-up technology.
Pollinator (2012) by E.V. Day continues her exploration of the reproductive organs of flowers, which started as high resolution scans
and were then split and mirrored vertically as in a Rorschach print. This latest incarnation takes the two-dimensional information and
extracts it back into space. With its polished, metallic surface, this sculpture becomes, both literally and figuratively, a place for
reflection about reproduction and replication, about endurance and timelessness, and about using technology to give an evanescent
life form a futuristic, alternate existence.
Jürgen Drescher’s Speech Bubble XII (2011) is a silver plated epoxy form; a sculptural appropriation of a 2-D graphic convention
reflecting a distorted version of the viewer. Drescher is concerned with transforming everyday “found objects” through the casting
process into “ready-made” art objects, which emphasize a skepticism and mistrust of social regulations and commercially orientated
agreements.
Head Head (2011) by Richard Dupont is a solid cast polyurethane head with smaller heads imbedded inside. These include various
cast life masks of the artist as well as life masks of arbitrary celebrities (Leonard Nimoy, Angelina Jolie, Beethoven) acquired over the
internet. Also included are aged epoxy rapid prototypes of both the artist and his wife dating back to an earlier sculptural tableaux
from 2003; as well as two antique glass heads- one clear and one black glass. This work acts as a repository for concrete identity,
memory and artistic process, and illustrates the growth and fragmented physical nature of digital identity. It addresses the function of
memory and its physical manifestations at a time when these are shifting away from older forms of memorialization- life casting,
traditional portraiture, and photography- towards a digital residue.
The River That Flows Both Ways (2011), by Spencer Finch is a suite of 5 pigmented paper panels which attempts to capture the
subtlety changing hues of the Hudson River on June 12,2008; at 9:20 am, 11:29 am, 12:10 pm, 3:54 pm, 7:08 pm). A large glass installation from this series can be seen along the High Line between 15th and 16th streets.
Carsten Höller’s Multiple Mushroom Dome (2012) was published by Carolina Nitsch for the New Museum of Contemporary Art, where
the artist recently had a large survey exhibition. This small work combines three different types of mushrooms into a sculptural hybrid,
the most recognizable being the red and white spotted, psychotropic Fly Agaric fungus, which has been important to shamanic
cultures of Eurasia, and has been the subject of many projects and installations by the artist.
Spiral (for LB) is part of Alyson Shotz’s continuing examination of repeating form in rotation and variation. It has a mathematical
structure which is based on the notion of rotation around a central point. The sculpture is built to the scale of an average woman's
height and inspired by Louise Bourgeois "Spiral Woman". In this case the woman is abstracted into geometry, but also spinning
around a center, hovering directly above the floor. The appearance of this work is largely informed by external factors that change
throughout the day- changes in light and season appearing on its surface.
Aaron Spangler’s Christian Separatist Home Birth (2012) is a massive wood cut, part of a larger series, made from connected panels
of basswood, which were logged and milled in North Western Minnesota where the artist lives. The use of material here is important in
considering that culture is partly created by ones environment.
Image: Carsten Höller
For further information or images please contact the gallery at 212-645-2030 or email: info@carolinanitsch.com
Carolina Nitsch Project Room
534 W. 22nd St, New York
Summer Hours: Tue. – Fri. 11-6