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Hernan Bas, Avner Ben-Gal, Varda Caivano, Charline von Heyl, John Kørner, Dana Schutz, Suling Wang
30 March - 24 April 2004
Painting 2004 showcases the work of a younger generation of
international artists originating from America, Argentina, Cuba,
Denmark, Germany, Israel and Taiwan. Their work draws on a variety of
sources including, romanticism, storytelling, recent and past art
history, literature and landscape but always there is a direct
engagement with the process of painting, often paralleled by an
embracing of ornament and surface.
Hernan Bas, 26 is a
graduate of the increasingly influential New School of Art in Miami and
his work is currently on show at the 2004 Whitney Biennial. Bass most
recent paintings and drawings including Apollo and Daphne as a Boy and
The Bringer of Bad News are from a series of work titled "on the edge
of elysium". The works were made out of a desire by Bas to relate back
to the era of Romanticism and to find an expanded definition for the
modern day dandy. This fascination with historical painting and
literature result in sensitive dynamic works that are at once familiar
and fantastic.
"There is a need in me to look at figures
and mythologies that inspired Wilde or Huysmans, it has become an odd
method for me to analyse my own attachments to these same figures. Why
does homosexuality seem to make you pre-disposed to liking these
things? As a result this work is tainted with Saint Sebastian martyr
types, dying dandies and peacock feathers, all the materials that
dictate a certain queer vocabulary."
Hernan Bas, 2004.
Born in Israel in 1966, Avner Ben-Gal
lives and works in New York. His work was included in Clandestine at
the 50th Venice Biennale last year. The paintings included in this
exhibition are part of a larger body of work which resulted from a
three hour trip by the artist across the state of Mississippi two years
ago. As in earlier work Ben-Gal traverses the landscape of social,
physical, political order and reconfigures the possibilities of such
dynamics to create a world of hyper-reality where the division of truth
and fiction are distorted. In these paintings low lives, whores,
transvestites and stooges, whose sexual identity is often ambiguous,
are depicted in an abstracted, deserted and raw landscape.
Varda Caivano
was born in Buenos Aires in 1971. She moved to London in 1999 to study
fine art at Goldsmiths College and will graduate this year with an MA
in painting from the Royal College of Art. Caivano has shown at amongst
others The Approach Gallery, MW Projects, London, and Bloomberg New
Contemporaries 2001. Caivano's intimate and ephemeral paintings often
take time to reveal themselves. They are executed in a precarious
manner with a delicate touch and thin paint which often results in an
evocation or essence of an object rather than an outright depiction.
I
see painting as a kind of precarious practice in which the painter
attempts to reveal the unsayable through an engagement with the image
that is not without discomfort. I find myself trying to subvert
painting, resulting in paintings that reflect this ambivalence,
embracing both romanticism and scepticism.
Varda Caivano, 2004.
Born in Germany in 1960 Charline Von Heyl
lives and works in New York. Von Heyls paintings draw their power from
the interplay of positive and negative space, the fanning out of
abstraction, and the layers from which the contrasting base and object
are built up. Ornamental elements rub shoulders with surfaces that have
superimposed and underlying structures. The painterly process is not
hidden for the benefit of a definitive end product; rather it is
present and refers to the multiple, often-contradictory steps toward
the discovery of an image that can never be completely revealed.
"I
am interested to get a "feeling" of representation without ever
abandoning abstraction, like an image that is almost there but not
describable. The subject of the paintings is the painting itself and in
every painting exists a new possibility of a representation of an
abstract painting. The tension between the paintings is as important as
the tension in the painting".
Charline von Heyl, 2004.
John Kørner
was born in Århus, Denmark in 1967. He is an artist interested in
examining how viewers respond to his painting, and often shows his work
outside the usual setting of a museum or gallery. He works
simultaneously with vivid colours and large empty white surfaces, where
everything takes place at the margins. The motifs or problems in
Kørners paintings are rooted in both the real and metaphysical worlds.
Natural phenomena are often shown alongside more surreal elements with
both form and content constantly transformed through repetition of
motifs, which lead to new and absurd connections that are often playful
and poetic.
Dana Schutz was born in 1976 and lives and
works in New York. Schutzs work has been described as teetering on
the edge of tradition and innovation.
"My paintings are loosely
based on meta-narratives. The pictures float in and out of pictorial
genres. Still lives become personified, portraits become events, and
landscapes become constructions. I embrace the area between which the
subject is composed and decomposing, formed and formless, inanimate and
alive. Recently I have been making paintings of sculptural goddesses,
transitory still lives, people who make things, people who are made,
and people who have the ability to eat themselves. Although the
paintings themselves are not specifically narrative, I often invent
imaginative systems and situations to generate information. These
situations usually delineate a site where making is a necessity,
audiences potentially dont exist, objects transcend their function,
and reality is malleable."
Dana Schutz, 2004
Suling Wang
grew up in rural Taiwan. She moved to London in 1993 and graduated with
an MA in Painting from the Royal College of Art in 1999. Her work has
consistently developed a contemporary approach to painting through
addressing concerns about her identity and location as an artist. Her
large scale canvases are characterised by sweeping stokes of colour and
an attentively patterned surface. Dripping and cartoon-like in their
expression her works reveal a strong association with landscape and the
human form beyond the layers of abstract tangled forms.
As
a child, I spoke only one language, a language that could not be
written down, and I had an understanding of the world, which was based
on an oral tradition. Now I speak in a few different languages and my
work has developed out of my own sense of uncertainty regarding my
placement within different cultural traditions.
Suling Wang, 2004.
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