Wednesday, September 26, 2012

bellum omnium contra omnes

William Powhida and I have a collaborative exhibition opening at Gallery Poulsen in Copenhagen on Friday September 28, 2012.  The work and press release are below...

9'2"x 5' graphite on paper


9'2"x 5' graphite on paper

34"x45" graphite on paper

34"x45" graphite on paper



34"x45" graphite on paper
                                             
  
45"x 34" graphite on paper


Bellum Omnium Contra Omnes


Det er med stor glæde og forventning, at jeg har inviteret de to New York-baserede kunstnere Jade Townsend (1977) og William Powhida (1976) til at udstille i mit galleri fra 28. september – 27. oktober 2012. Det er første gang de to kunstnere udstiller på en fælles udstilling her i Danmark.

Townshend og Powhida mødtes under uddannelse og har i kortere og længere perioder siden år 2000 samarbejdet om forskellige kunstneriske projekter. Deres samarbejde bunder i en forståelse for hinandens arbejde og deres fælles projekter skyldes som regel deres ofte intense samtaler og diskussioner om aktuelle emner og kunstverdenen i særdeleshed. Kunstnerne finder samtalerne fascinerende og deres tegninger er et forsøg på at give det stærke engagement og interessen et visuelt udtryk, tegningerne er en måde at dele deres spørgsmål og bekymringer med publikum.

Townsend og Powhida vakte en del opsigt med deres fælles kunstværk Hooverville fra 2010, da de med stor detaljerigdom, opfindsomhed og viden fortolkede Art Basel Miami Beach messen humoristisk og kritisk, da de portrætterede gallerister, kuratorer og kunstnere, der deltager i denne årlige begivenhed, som en slumby beboet af kunstmessens aktører.

Alle kunstværker i udstillingen på Galleri Poulsen er fælles tegninger. Hovedværket Bellum Omnium contra Omnes (oversat fra latin, "en krig af alle mod alle") er en gigantisk tegning, som det har taget måneder at udføre. Motivet er en slagmark, som den ville se ud, hvis den postmoderne kunstverden var en sådan. Kunstnerne er inspireret af hollandske krigsillustrationer fra det 16. århundrede og skildrer den moderne kunstverden, som en kontinuerlig kamp mellem forskellige lejre, der hver drives af deres egen indre logik. Med sarkasme som deres våben, har kunstnerne skabt deres egne kategorier, definitioner og diagrammer, der beskriver deres personlige følelser om de stridende parter i kunstverdenen. Disse er ifølge kunstnerne, ikke defineret ved deres forskellighed, men ved deres relative og overlappende positioner inden for kunstverdenen og hvordan vi alle er en del af en større helhed. Townsend og Powhida anvender historie, myte, allegori og stil til at forestille sig den moderne kunstverden, som et mærkeligt og ukendt territorium og resultatet er imponerende.

Ifølge Townsend og Powhida er de "i høj grad en del af det system, som vi kritiserer. Vi vil dog understrege, at vi ikke blot dømmer, men også tilbyder en kritisk analyse af de konkurrerende systemer, som vi selv er en del af. Satire er det værktøj vi bruger til at punktere samtidskunstens selvhøjtidelighed, samtidig med at vi gør indholdet tilgængeligt for beskueren."

»I denne udstilling forsøger vi at undersøge vores virkelighed, vi fortolker den ved at bruge humor og derved skabe en dialog. Vi har ikke svarene. Vi tror ikke, at der findes et endegyldigt svar. Det vi forsøger at gøre med vores værker, er at nedbryde kompleksiteten i de systemer vi er omgivet af og finde en måde, der vil tilskynde beskueren til at engagere sig og sætte spørgsmålstegn ved det vi præsenterer dem for. ”

For Gallery Poulsen er det vigtig at vise udstillingen Bellum Omnium Contra Omnes her i Danmark. De to udstillende kunstnere, der kommer fra et af verdens epicentrene for samtidskunst, er optaget af aktuelle emner og de har skabt kunstværker, der tilbyder et nyt perspektiv, kunstværker der er reflekterende og som forholder sig kritisk til vores fælles virkelighed og vores opfattelser af denne.
 

Bellum Omnium Contra Omnes


It is with great joy and anticipation, I have invited the two New York-based artists Jade Townsend (1977) and William Powhida (1976) to show in my gallery from the 28th September - 27th October, 2012. It is the first time the two artists exhibit in a joint exhibition here in Denmark.

Townsend and Powhida met in in graduate school and have since 2000 been doing collaborative projects on/off. They have an appreciation for each others work and their joint projects usually stem from their often intense conversations and discussions about the current state of affairs and the art world. They have found those conversations to be fascinating, and their drawings are an attempt to translate that deep interest to an audience and drawing is a way to share their questions and concerns in an engaging way beyond talking.

Townsend and Powhida caused quite a stir with their joint artwork Hooverville from 2010, when they in great detail, ingenuity and knowledge interpreted the Art Basel Miami Beach fair humorously and critically, as they portrayed the gallery owners, curators and artists participating in this annual event as a shanty town.

All of the artworks in the show at Gallery Poulsen are collaborative drawings. Bellum Omnium contra Omnes (translated from Latin, "a war of all against all") the main artwork, is a gigantic drawing, months underway that depicts a battleground, as it would look if the postmodern art world was ever a such. The artists are inspired by Dutch War illustrations from the 16th century and portray the contemporary art world as a continuous struggle between different camps, each one driven by their own internal logic. With sarcasm as their weapon the artists have created their own categories, definitions and diagrams describing their personal feelings about the conflicting parties in the arts. These are defined in artists optic not by their separateness, but by their relative and overlapping positions in the art world and how everyone is part of a larger whole. Townsend and Powhida apply history, myth, allegory and style to imagine the contemporary art world as both a strange and unfamiliar territory with an impressive result.

According to the artists they 'are very much a part of the system that we are critiquing. We would say, however, that we are not just passing judgments, but offer a critical analysis of the competing systems that we are a part of. Satire happens to be a tool that we find useful in that process to deflate some of the self-importance of contemporary art and make the content accessible.'

'In this show we are really trying to identify what exists, understand it, poke a little fun at it and create a dialogue about the current state of affairs. We don't have the answers. We don't think there are answers to this. I think what we are trying to do is break down the complexities of the system or systems that exist in a way that will encourage the viewer to find themselves within that and identify and question where there tastes or values lie.'

For Gallery Poulsen this is an important exhibition to show here in Denmark. It is important to show the current state of affairs from one of the epicenter’s of contemporary art and show works that may offer a new perspective to our perception of art and artworks that are reflective and relate critically to our age and reality and our perceptions of it.
 


Thursday, September 13, 2012

Art in the Age of Political Absurdity

I'm very excited to be a part of this show and get the chance to show Hooray for Progress for the first time in New York City.  For a preview of the piece installed at the McNay Museum in San Antonio, click here:

144 West 14th Street
New York, NY 10011
Monday - Saturday 
11am to 6pm
Thursday until 8pm

Opening Reception:
Thursday, September 27, 6−8 PM
On View: 
September 28November 10, 2012

Guest Curators: 

Eleanor Heartney and Larry Litt

Just in time for election season, "Party Headquarters: Art in the Age of Political Absurdity" updates the grand tradition of political satire to shine a light on the American psyche in an era of political polarization. Works in a range of media take on the pressing questions of the day, among them the social consequences of greed, the corrosive effects of money and religion in politics, the contradictory aspirations embodied by the American Dream, and the destructive outcome of unquestioning faith in American exceptionalism. With wit, satire, and passion, the artists in this show urge us to acknowledge both the strengths and the follies of contemporary America and ask if we are living up to our own best beliefs. 

Artists:
Donna Catanzaro
Enrique Chagoya
Michael D'Antuono
Sally Edelstein
Jerry Kearns
Ian Laughlin
Kara Maria
Greta Pratt
Duke Riley
Peter Saul
Federico Solmi
Jade Townsend
Mark Wagner
Martin Wilner

In conjunction with the exhibition, a New York Mobile Voter Registration Center designed by artist Duke Riley (M.F.A '08) will tour the streets of Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens.  

Our fifth annual Pratt Falls political caberet, produced by Larry Litt, will take place in the gallery on October 16, October 30 and November 6 at 7pm.  

Please visit www.pratt.edu/exhibitions for more information.


Image credits (left to right): Michael D'Antuono, American Pie, 2010, oil on canvas, 42 x 46 inches; Greta Pratt, "Rodney Parker", from the series Liberty Wavers, 2010-2012, photographic installation, 22 x 28 inches.