|
Opening Reception: Thursday October 14, 6-8 pm
Featuring: Graham Gillmore, James Nye, Alex McLeod,
Frank Torng, Angela Grossmann, Ben van Netten, Trevor
Guthrie, Noah Becker, and Attila Richard Lukacs
While a mere six longitudinal degrees
separate Toronto from Vancouver, the
distance between the art worlds of Eastern
and Western Canada is vast. Bringing ten
Canadian artists to Claire Oliver Gallery,
guest curator Noah Becker seeks not only to
bridge the gap between these two important Canadian
art scenes but also to awaken the sometimes nearsighted
New York audience to the abundance of artistic talent from our northern neighbor.
A melting pot of international cross-cultural pollination, New York City makes the perfect
venue for the increasingly international focus of these emerging Canadian artists.
Without a sufficient tradition to emulate, Attila Richard Lukacs, Angela Grossmann, and
Graham Gillmore have laid their own foundation in Vancouver that supports and
inspires a new generation of talent. Lukacs is known for his expressive paintings of raw,
edgy male figures which blur the line between homo-eroticism and aggressive physical
competition; he has always chosen subjects that allow him to critique from the outside.
Just as Bacon painted the male body at that point where it exploded into
schizophrenia, so too Lukacs paints the male body in all its hysteria. Grossman makes
complex collages, combining her own painting and drawing with layers of obsessively
collected old photographs. The resulting works are intense psychological portraits,
slightly jarring and disturbing in their ability to leave
the viewer with the feeling he has violated some
trust with his gaze. Gillmore transcribes excerpts
from musical lyrics, literature, tabloids, or
aphorisms into whimsical speech bubbles,
graphically housing individual letters like children’s
blocks as they fracture the language and offer
witty social commentary emancipated from its
original context.
In Vancouver newcomers Frank Torng and Ben
van Netten, we see the continuation of careful
process and intricate technique. Exploring
themes of sexuality, vanity, and performance,
Torng’s photographs create documentary-style portraits of drag queens and go-go boys. However, the comfortable informality and
fondness with which he treats his subjects gives us a glimpse into the ritual and culture
behind the scenes of gay nightlife. Van Netten uses a wet on wet technique to create
his seamless oil paintings. Focusing on the in-between moment when the mind and
eyes shift from one object to the next, the artist’s photorealistic landscapes are
reminiscent of the view one has from a car window – there is not really enough time to
take in the details. By pausing on an image that isn’t easily identifiable, he unlocks our
subconscious thought and skillfully captures moments that typically go unnoticed.
Trevor Guthrie similarly toys with the viewer’s perception of reality. The artist creates large
format charcoal drawings that play with perspective, leaving the viewer slightly off
balance. His subtle historical references are often only discernable through his titles,
giving these technically impressive works even further depth and meaning.
Toronto brings us Catherine Heard, James Nye, and Alex McLeod. Heard’s series of
sculpture entitled “errata”, meaning literally “record of error”, challenge our
preconceived ideas of beauty and the human condition. Asking the viewer - what is
normal – the artist plays with society’s ideas and ideals of the human form. The artist’s
work is grim and gothic yet quirky and ironic; she shows us characters from a forbidden
fairytale that summon our own fears and fancies. Nye’s studio practice concerns the
study of the principles of light and how they give shape to the objects the artist creates.
The results are a three dimensional reflection-like juxtaposition of graffiti and the
architecture where it was found. As if we ourselves are passing the structures portrayed
in a graffiti sprayed train car, Nye allows us to examine each layer individually yet forces
us to create their inevitable synthesis. McLeod constructs intricate, surreal worlds in
candy-colored palettes with space age forms and childlike imagery. Using CGI and
computer software typically reserved for filmmaking,
he carefully lights and digitally manipulates the
scenes to amplify their believability. The resulting
landscapes, which exist only in the artist's mind before
their computer creation, are hyper-realistic, infinitely
detailed, and compulsive in a way that could only
exist in the digital, artificial realm.
The curator’s own obsessive, imagined worlds pose
questions for the viewer about power and sociopolitical
structures. Becker creates metaphoric
landscapes in multi-level, invented realms depicting
dreamlike, folkloric narratives. His work, along with that
of the artists he brings to New York, pushes the
boundaries of technique and handwork. The high
level of craft and content evident in each artists’
studio practice makes the selected works interesting,
significant and, furthermore, right at home at Claire
Oliver Gallery.
|