Brody Condon, Jen Liu, Avelino Sala, and Adriaan van der Ploeg. The curatorial theme of this summer group show explores aspects of coming of age, a defining moment for adolescents worldwide from the 1950, when the term teenager was first used, until the present.
The curatorial theme of this summer group show explores aspects of coming
of age, a defining moment for adolescents worldwide from the 1950 ”when
the term "teenager" was first used until the present. The exhibition
presents narratives that express both what today's youth are going through
as well as nostalgia for older rites and traditions. Each work looks at one
or several themes that are characteristic of this moment, when unsure
feelings struggle for a sense of clarity, when a person's identity slowly
take shape. The works also examine teenagers' real life or spiritual
experiments as they aspire to answer existential questions.
Drug use and secret societies, violence and anarchy, rejection of society
and rebellion against parents are all intimately examined, as are issues
with friendship and sexuality (gay or straight), youth sports culture,
video and role-playing games, amusement parks, nationalism and identity,
comics, fantasy and science fiction, death metal and punk rock, hardcore
electronic music, and more.
Adriaan van der Ploeg's straightforward color photographs portray teenage
game mostly adolescent boys whose brightly lit, often-sullen faces
fill the frame. As contemporary video games heavily employs use of the
avatar, it is disconcerting to see the boys "unmasked" in the light of a
camera.
In his work Title, Condon montages video clips of teens experiencing the
legal psychedelic drug Salvia divinorum, the sounds and images overlapping.
The clips, posted to YouTube and available worldwide, demonstrate the gap
between lived experience of transcendental aims with its representation.
In Avelino Sala's Fuego Camina Conmigo, a young man dribbles an enflamed
soccer ball. Youth sports often encourage camaraderie, but this video
metaphorically suggests that soccer can also fervently and sharply divide
not only school children but also cities and even entire countries.
In her video series Brethren of the Stone, Jen Liu's characters sings the
lyrics, translated into a Latin aria, to Pink Floyd's "Comfortably Numb"
and films a marching band performing Black Sabbath's "Iron Man," all while
creatures dressed as plantlike beasts conduct bewildering rituals. The
fantastical imagery in her mixed-media work in watercolor and collage could
have appeared on a prog-rock gatefold album cover in the 1970s.
The exhibition will consist of a video program in the main gallery with a
selection of one video by each artist. Those artists working in mediums
other than video will be shown in the office space.
Opening Wednesday July 2nd, 6-8 pm
Virgil de Voldere
526 West 26th Street - New York
Summer hours: tuesday to friday 11 am to 6 pm
Free admission