Showing posts with label Sasha Meret. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sasha Meret. Show all posts

Friday, June 2, 2017

Last Call: Duchamp's Fountain, Sasha Meret @ Shchukin, Esmeralda Kosmatopoulos @ 2 Rivington

  

Marcel Duchamp, Fountain, 2017/1964

On April 10, 2017, Francis Naumann Fine Art celebrated the centenary of Marcel Duchamp's famous/infamous Fountain with an exhibition of artworks that pay homage to this revolutionary artist's gesture: a urinal turned up on its side, signed by a mysterious unknown called "R. Mutt." It was submitted to the supposedly open, unjuried first exhibition of the Society of Independent Artists in New York City, in the Grand Central Palace (since destroyed to make way for a taller, more lucrative real estate investment). The Society of Independent Artists included Marcel Duchamp, Katherine Dreier, Walter Arensburg, Albert Gleizes, William Glackens, and Man Ray.  From a position of power, Duchamp dared to submit a "ready-made" (already a concept in his repertoire, begun with Bottle Rack of 1914).  In this case, it was a decidedly male bathroom fixture with a sort of vaginal orientation on its pedestal.  This mass-produced ceramic site for depositing urine was sold by the J.L. Mott Iron Works Company. Nothing could be more antithetical for art.  It was a total Dada gesture: not unique, not handmade, not meant to be enjoyed for its aesthetic invention, and not made by the artist himself in any way, even as a commission from the foundry.  The supposedly "open" committee immediately rejected Duchamp's conceptual piece before the opening on April 10, and Duchamp immediately resigned from the SIA.  The urinal was photographed in Alfred Stieglitz's studio, published in The Blind Man magazine, and somehow lost. Reproductions are in various collections, most notably at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which has curated its own homage to Marcel Duchamp's "scandalous" gesture (on view through December 3, 2017).

 Kathleen Gilje, Sant'Orinale, 2017
gesso, goldleaf, gouache, oil paint on panel
16 3/4 x 13 inches

My favorite is Kathleen Gilje's Sant'Orinale (Saint Urinal) which says in its concise visual vocabulary how this subversive gesture has been transformed into a icon of art historical veneration, becoming as sanctified as a devotional image from the early Renaissance. Moreover, Gilje's painting amplifies the irony of this particular show by intimating that these appropriations may enrich many an artist due to the sales of their creations in response to Duchamp's anti-art work. In Gilje's work we see a masterfully rendered image of Fountain (Duchamp's rejection of "retinal art") surrounded by gold leaf in the manner reserved for Christian saints, Christ and the Virgin Mary. The sheer opulence, precious materials, uniqueness of the hand, and artistic fame of both artists (Duchamp and Gilje) flies in the face of Duchamp's original intentions, enacting a rebellion on its own terms and insisting on the glorified permanent art object that Duchamp decided to militate against and do without (by misplacing the first Fountain).  
Mike Bidlo, Fractured Fountain, Series of 8, 2015
Bronze, 14 3/4 x 16 x 11 inches


Mike Bidlo, Sherry Levine and Ray Beldner (Peelavie) transgress the original transgressive object by casting a urinal in bronze or sewing a urinal out of dollar bills, respectively.

Sophie Matisse, Fountain Cake, 2017 
Meringue, frosting, chocolate chips
16 x 16 x 12 inches


More in keeping with the original may be Sofie Matisse's white frosted meringue cake, fashioned into the fabled Fountain, embedded with chocolate chips to depict the urinal's holes.  Saul Melman's Johnny on the Spot, a concert hall in the shape of Duchamp's urinal that was burned during the Burning Man Festival in 2003, also plays into the Duchamp's anti-fetishizing of art through longevity, collectability and enshrinement as scholars anoint the object with masterpiece status.  Their works are ephemeral, in keeping with Duchamp's original iteration.

The Francis Naumann Fine Art website announced that May 24th would be the last day of the show. However, you can still see the exhibition through today, Friday, June 2nd. Gallery hours are 11 am - 6 pm and online at Francis Naumann Fine Art, 24 West 57th Street, NYC.


Sasha Meret at his opening, Shchukin Gallery, 110 East 31st. Street, NYC
through June 6th

Sasha Meret: Incendiary Artifacts of Past Digressions, opened on May 4th at Shchukin Gallery amidst a flurry of fans eager to partake in the magical journey of Meret's surrealist mind. The evening felt electrified with excitement.  Fortunately, the show will continue past the closing day announced on the invitation.  At this moment, June 6th is the closing date.  Hopefully, it will be extended further.


Mythological in origin, each work resonates with Meret's profound insights into the humor and darkness of human existence. Above, we find beauty in  Meret's reordering of existential chaos, for here are material castoffs recontextualized into magnificent creatures/creations and prints replete with phantasmagorical figures writhing inside fascinating compositions.  We see connections and disruptions, Dantesque heads spilling pipes from one mouth to another.  It's a scene reminiscent of Purgatory or Hell or both. For Meret disturbs our minds into a state of morbid curiosity. There is humor and their is demonic discourse presented in deliciously intricate detail and excellent drawing. 

Sasha Meret, Emperor Duck, 2017


As always, entering Sasha Meret's exhibitions feels like a trip into another realm of existence, an exploration into an extraordinary consciousness of reorientations.  Meret is indeed a response to Marcel Duchamp's Fountain in our time: the ready-made loses its identity.  It's fluid, undefined and yet part of an ensemble that functions as an artwork. Thus, it is postmodern and Dadaesque without being Dada at all. For Meret creates an aesthetic environment that retains the appearance of each object while he subordinates the individual identities of the ingredients to the whole vision.  Sasha Meret: Incendiary Artifacts of Past Digressions was curated by CATM  NYC.

Esmeralda Kosmatopoulos, "What I always wanted to tell you but never dared," 2 Rivington, NYC
May 31 - June 5


Curator Clémence Mailly explains that the artist Esmerald Kosmatopoulos discovered the uncanny abilities of predictive digital programs in text and email applications.  "The virtual machine had been learning from the artist’s everyday written communications and was now trying to mimic at its best her writing style, appropriating her most used vocabulary and style, in an attempt to predict her next words. This parapraxis was shedding light in a somehow disturbing way the complex - man versus machine - dialectic as the phone had been anticipating the artist’s next words without her consent." To that end, the artist decided to use these written artifacts to help digital "ready-mades" become artworks by virtue of the artist's intervention. "And the rest is history . . . .," as she quotes in one of her audio pieces.  What I always wanted to tell you but never dared, is a pop-up exhibition at Parasol Projects 2 Rivington Street gallery, just around the corner from the New Museum and on the way to Morgenstern's ice cream.  Another heir to Duchamp's Fountain, Kosmatopoulos dares to re-contextualize the algorithmic accidents that occasion our co-dependent  relationship on our smartphones and other mobile devices, teasing out the humor in accidents of communication. detecting significant in this banal quotidian territory.   This pop-up show will last until Sunday, June 4th.  So try to catch it before it disappears or visit Kosmatopoulos' website to see more images of the installation.

Happy Birthday, Fountain, and thank you, Marcel.  Let's us also celebrate rejection and the victories that finally ensue.

Best wishes for the weekend,
Beth New York

aka Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, Ph.D.
Director and owner
New York Arts Exchange, LLC
www.nyarts-exchange.com 

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

New Year, New Us: New York Arts Exchange is now a division of New York Arts Etc., LLC -

NEXT GENERATION

It's a New Year and a New Name:   New York Arts Exchange is now New York Ats Etc., LLC, retaining the moniker "New York Arts Exchange" as a division of our arts education service. Today, I am pleased to announce our latest project: Art Above the Sofa: Next Generation, which is a juried show for art students in accredited programs (AA, BFA, MFA, Ph.D. and art academies of all kinds, including schools abroad).  We are eager to exhibit emerging artists whose visual vocabulary addresses the concerns, hopes, dreams and aspirations of their generation.  Millennials, lead on!

What is Art Above the Sofa?  It is an irreverent poke at a much maligned phantom category of art that is often mentioned but never truly defined.  Who seriously makes art exclusively for an installation above a sofa?  Who wouldn't mind selling a work that winds up placed above the sofa, admired by its owners and shared with their guests?  Art above the sofa is often a beloved source of frequent contemplation. For most of us who buy art, we look for a work to cherish, study often and find endless surprises in what becomes a familiar companion.  An artwork above a sofa, in the intimacy of one's home, might turned into a steady, unquestioning love affair.

Therefore our concept of "Art Above the Sofa" is slightly ironic and hopefully disruptive. We are not suggesting that the artists match the furniture in a client's home or produce pleasantly "decorative" canvases.  Rather we seek excellent art that might be edgy, confrontational, uncomfortable, or decidedly spiritual in a complicated way. And we also seek humor that demonstrates intelligent wit and innuendo.

Consider the role of the sofa in Jacques-Louis' famous portrait of Madame Jeanne-Françoise Julie Adélaïde Récamier, decorously arranged on an Directoire Style lounge.  Legend has it that the sitter hated this cold interpretation of her personality and commissioned the early Romantic François Pascal SimoGérard, who did indeed capture her sensual charms. But when it came to choices, René Magritte went right to David's sofa, transforming Madame R into a seated casket that seems to ridicule the Academy's moribund state of affairs.  Let's find our inner Magritte and have fun while we say something bold and exceptionally new!  Art Above the Sofa challenges us to invent a new kind of art, a Post-Post-Modernism or something totally off the category charts.

Jacques-Lous David, Madame Récamier, 1800, Louvre, Paris

François Pascal Simon, Baron Gérard, Madame Récamier, 1802
Musée Carnavalet  

René Magritte, Perspective: Madame Récamier, by David, 1951
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa



Dear friends of the New York Arts Exchange, now New York Arts Etc., LLC - - please support emerging artists by sharing information about our art competition and exhibition in April. Send a link to our website www.artabovethesofa.com - and come celebrate with us in person.

The exhibition Art Above the Sofa: Next Generation  will take place at 171 Elizabeth Street, between Spring and Kenmare, from  April 27 to 30, 2017.   Opening celebration: April 27th.

As for the New York Arts Exchange tours and lectures for 2017  - we will post our schedule separately.  In the meantime, please visit our website: New York Arts Exchange to see details about our current exhibition  "Sasha Meret: Selected Works" at Rafael Gallery, 235 East 59th Street, NYC, between 2nd and 3rd Avenues.  We will schedule a day with Sasha at the show in March.  The show was extended to March 31st.  

This week, please join me at JCC Greenwich for a lecture on Queen Esther in Art.  Tickets and information can be found at New York Arts Exchange or on the JCC Greenwich website.


Best wishes,
Beth

Beth S. Gersh-Nesic, Ph.D.
Director and owner
New York Arts Etc., LLC










Wednesday, December 7, 2016

Sasha Meret: Selected Works opens at Rafael Gallery on East 59th Street, Monday, December 12th - 6 - 8 pm




Sasha Meret: Select Works
Rafael Gallery, 235 East 59th Street, NYC
December 12 – 22, 2016; January 5 – 23, 2017
Opening on Monday, December 12th, 6 - 8 PM

Rafael Gallery is pleased to present Sasha Meret: Selected Works, which complements this internationally-acclaimed artist’s participation in the exhibition Bedazzled, concurrently on view at Lehman College Gallery through January 14th.  Our show begins on December 12nd  with an opening reception from 6 – 8 PM.  Curated by Beth S. Gersh-Nešić, the director of the New York Arts Exchange, this particular exhibition contextualizes Sasha Meret’s extraordinarily complex installation, Agendada: Books of Hours, 2010-16, at Lehman College, through its grouping of informative sculptures, photographs and paintings. Meret’s entire body of work draws from the influence of Dada, Surrealism, Conceptual Art and Quantum Mechanics – among many other sources.  It is a heady mix that infuses Meret’s visual language with a phantasmagorical expression, evident in his elaborate sculptures, assemblages, installations, paintings, photographs, drawings, prints and videos – on view in the exhibition space and also in photographs. “The main ingredients in art are mystery, surprise and spontaneity,” Meret explained. “You have to create the environment for the accidents to breathe . . . to invite happy accidents.  This is part of my process.”



Queztelcoatl, 2007-8

The son of Romanian and Russian parents, Sasha Meret was born in Transylvania in 1955.  He completed an MA in economics in 1977 and then moved to New York in 1987 to pursue his true passion, art, at Columbia University. There, he studied printmaking with Tony Harrison.  In 1994, he joined the International Art Group “Gaia” in France.  Over the last 26 years, Meret has exhibited all over the world, most notably in China, Japan, Italy, France, Switzerland, and the US.  Recently, he orchestrated an exhibition and performance piece at AmyD Arte Spazio in Milan.  He has been honored with an exhibition at the Romanian Cultural Institute in New York.  His wearable fashion was featured in XEX Magazine (October 5, 2012). 



The Divine Thirst Quencher, 2010

Founded in 1948 by Rafael Aryeh, Rafael Gallery specializes in Old Master, Nineteenth Century, Modern and Contemporary art and antiques from all over the world and Native American art of various media.  In 1978, the gallery established its main exhibition space at 1020 Madison Avenue.  Now under the leadership of Benjamin Aryeh, the gallery has expanded to three locations.  The East 59th Street galleries, situated in the heart of the Decorators and Design District, are dedicated to Modern and Contemporary masters.

Gallery hours are Monday through Friday, 11:30 AM to 6:30 PM.  For more information, contact Associate Director Wade Bonds at wade.gallery59@gmail.com or (212) 755-4888.