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in cooperation with gb agency, Paris
Murray Guy is pleased to announce an exhibition with works by Mac Adams, Robert Breer, Mark
Geffriaud, Jirí Kovanda, Roman Ondák, and Pratchaya Phinthong, presented in conjunction with gb
agency, Paris. Please join us for an opening reception on Friday, 11 May, from 6 to 8 p.m.
Reclining, ambulating, balancing, reflecting, approaching and withdrawing, this exhibition brings
together a group of objects that might propose the question: what is it like to be a thing?
The extraordinary works of Robert Breer (1926 — 2011) include sculptures, drawings, paintings, flip
books, and many hand-drawn animated films. His "floats" — first produced in the early 1960s — are
very slow-moving sculptures, often made from materials like Styrofoam, resin, or metal foil. They
constantly rearrange themselves and their viewers as they wander through the exhibition space,
bumping into walls, into each other, and into other works and objects.
The sculptures and performances of Jirí Kovanda (b. 1953) often animate familiar consumer objects
(sugar cubes, ketchup bottles, flashlights, a bicycle.) Kovanda combines or uses objects
"inappropriately" — for example suspending a bag of marshmallows and a hammer on either side of a
long piece of twine, or inserting wooden wedges into the cracks between old paving stones. Making
them speak in strange ways, his actions and interventions often endow objects with an uncanny
eroticism.
The Postmodern Tragedy photographs of Mac Adams (b. 1943) show various decorative objects (a
teapot, a lamp, a pastry tray) in front of monochromatic studio backdrops, while various violent
activities (a shooting, an assault, a kidnapping) can be seen reflected in their metallic skins. The
contradictions or interior lives of these objects speak to the moment at which they were photographed,
in the late 1980s, after a decade of the polarizing economic policies of Ronald Reagan and Margaret
Thatcher.
First realized at the Fondazione Morra Greco in Naples, Roman Ondák's (b. 1966) Breath on Both Sides
is an inflated red balloon squeezed through a small hole in a gallery window pane, one bulbous end
poking through the interior, the other enjoying outside air. Ondák frequently draws attention to the
change in status objects acquire once framed by art institutions; for this work to exist, the balloon and
the architecture must accept a state of co-dependence.
Traveling is a key reference in the work of Pratchaya Phinthong (b. 1974, Bangkok), as he often
stages or refers to material or discursive displacements — for example, a quixotic effort to construct a
house for polar bears in Chang Mai, Thailand. Phinthong's objects include an ongoing series of subtly
altered, pre-made Renaissance canvases; still wrapped in their plastic packaging, they unsettle their
own status and the presumed authorship or creativity of their producer.
In 2009 Mark Geffriaud (b. 1977) took an object from the home of his friend and fellow artist Eric
Stephany. Both agreed that the object could stay in Geffriaud's possession as long as its owner would
not be able to identify the nature of the missing thing, and this exchanged object would then constitute
an artwork, entitled Cyrus. This object has been entrusted to the gallery for the duration of the
exhibition, but if and when Stephany realizes the nature of the thing, it will be returned to him and will
no longer constitute an artwork.
For more information or images, please contact the gallery at +1-212-463-7372 or info@murrayguy.com.
www.murrayguy.com
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