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Opening Reception: Thursday, 22nd March, 6-8PM
“Dogman loved Ms. Rabbit Lady so much he wanted to run deep into the
woods with her so he could eat her in privacy.” - Kathy Ruttenberg
Working with only “earth, fire and emotions,” Kathy Ruttenberg's fairytale-like ceramic sculptures create a world that is
immediately captivating, but the viewer might be surprised by what’s down the rabbit hole.
Her first show at Stux Gallery, "The Earth Exhales", intersects in sensibility with works by artists such as Adriana
Varejão, Arlene Shechet, and Kiki Smith, and may recall the theatricality of Mike Kelley, Louise Bourgeois and
Mauricio Cattelan. Her violent and devastating visions are disturbingly peaceful, idyllic and sustainable. Erasing the
boundary of the metaphorical and the literal, Ruttenberg’s world is filled with lush foliage, woodland creatures and
puzzling, slightly grim yet open-ended reveries of gender relations. Men are always portrayed as animals in gentlemen's
clothing, and women are always well-groomed and dressed in rounded skirts. On one hand, men are literally animal-like
savages, but at the same time they are native creatures of the woodlands and the earth itself, whereas the female figures
are the outsiders, if not intruders. It is hard to tell if they are men masquerading as animals, or vice versa. Death, in works
such as “The Moment After”, is the stark aftermath of failed love, but also an opportunity to blossom imaginatively and
become one with earth.
In “Submission”, a man with a deer’s head holds a woman in a Pieta fashion, but religious weight or any other references
to non-romantic aspects of reality dissipate in Ruttenberg's wonderland. Their love story retreat behind their dead-pan,
nonchalant expressions, and is instead narrated in a completely carnal and materialized manner:on the man’s back, two
windows are carved out to display a mouse and a dog, and an image of a dog man eating her alive is tattooed on his skin.
The occurrence of love is commemorated, and her demise and sacrifice are casually noted.
“Ladies Chaste”, a light sculpture, further complicates this discussion. The piece is composed of women alone, but the
freedom from the dogman-ruled earth does not translate into relief. Literally suspended from the earth in a bright
chandelier, the ladies are dressed in angelic, beribboned white dresses. The flowers that consumed their bodies in “The
Moment After” are now uprooted and purely decorative. However, the women are identical, lifeless and stifled, dangling
with detached joints like rack of unused puppets. Instead of imagined vegetation, they are consumed and saturated by
real, artificial lighting, and have been reduced to a set of commercial light fixtures in exchange for gaining chastity. The
burning bulbs echo the firing clay, and this time the agitating heat is tangible as the light casts on the viewer.
-Lucy Li
Kathy Ruttenberg is a New York based, Chicago born sculptor. She received her BFA from the School of Visual Arts in
New York, pursuing advance studies in Morocco and at New York University. She has been exhibited widely in the U.S.
and internationally in places such as Korea, Spain and France. Ruttenberg’s work has received wide coverage in
publications such as The New York Times, Art in America, The Independent and The Boston Globe.
For further information please contact the gallery at Andrea@stuxgallery.com
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