EDGAR LECIEJEWSKI – FERRAGOSTO

Posted on 2019-08-26

Fire is an ambiguous phenomenon. It represents both destruction and renewal. In the Middle Ages, fire was a medium of punishment and purification. It stood as a kind of limbo, marking the boundary between the total bliss of paradise and the eternal damnation of hell. In many cultures, it is worshipped as something divine. In China, it is typical to burn bundles of cash termed “Hell Money” to provide for relatives in the afterlife and to honor the gods.
Something of this magical or transformative power of fire burns in Edgar Leciejewski‘s “Fabric Images.” Here, still life forms, assemblage and portraits move across each other like projected slides. “Fire gives and takes,” Leciejewski points out. “In fire, one sees everything.” The artist uses images of a dozen or so culturally or socially significant contemporary women, hanging their photographs in his studio alongside various decorative materials and wax prints. The images become an homage of sorts to modern heroines, trailblazers, artists or pioneers. We recognize the likes of political theorist and philosopher Hannah Ahrendt, the Duchess of Sussex Meghan Markle, Chinese pop star Fan Bingbing, the actress Tilda Swinton, the grand pianist Marthat Argerich and the first transgender model to grace the cover of Vogue Valentina Sampaio. Other women pictured come from the artist’s circle of friends and acquaintances.

Opposite – 03.05.2019 (Welttag der Pressefreiheit), 2019

Exhibition runs through to September 14th, 2019

Contemporary Fine Arts – CFA
Grolmanstrasse 32/33
Charlottenburg
10623 Berlin

cfa-berlin.de

  

VOLUME FOUR, ISSUE NINE

Posted on 2019-08-21

Photography & Art content Paul Franco, Sophie Green, Keith Haring, Timothee Lambrecq, Jason Lee, Courtney MC, NASA.

Photography & Fashion content Hollie Fernando, Jens Ingversson, Quentin Jones, Kenneth Cappello, Jem Mitchell, Ben Parks, Michael Harrison Rudd, Hannah Scott Stevenson.

Available at exitmagazineshop.bigcartel.com

  

MARK HANDFORTH – TRASH CAN CANDLES

Posted on 2019-08-19

Mark Handforth’s sculptures imbue the almost-invisible features of our lives – street lamps, road signs, fluorescent lights and fire hydrants – with formal properties that make them strange, larger than life and enigmatically off-kilter. They are meticulously crafted, but deliberately imperfect, often containing a wry humour and poetry in their references and arrangement in space.
Handforth’s objects collage elements together in alluring compositions; an early sculpture of a Vespa is covered in burning candles and becomes an altar; a street lamp is twisted into the shape of a five-pointed star, and a piece of drift wood is cast in concrete and juxtaposed with fluorescent lights. His works have both a sense of distortion and of the manipulation of the urban landscape – literally tied in knots – but also, often an archaic and poetic sensibility.

Opposite – Silver Forest, 2019

Exhibition runs through to September 13th, 2019

Modern Art
50-58 Vyner Street
E2 9DG
London

modernart.net

  

MARCH AVERY

Posted on 2019-08-19

Focusing on portraiture and landscape and punctuated with still life, the selection of works on view repositions the vitality of moments past through paint applied to canvas. Mothers read bedtime stories; children eat breakfast, sit on laps, and play Chinese checkers; clouds hover over the surface of a cerulean blue lake; and potted plants are placed amongst a child’s toys or present themselves in paintings hung behind a sofa, upon which a young woman reclines in the company of a cat. These diaristic tendencies that characterize Avery’s oeuvre encapsulate a lifelong commitment to the process of painting itself.

Opposite – Triple Jump, 1999

Exhibition runs through to September 14th, 2019

Blum & Poe
19 E. 66th Street
NY 10065
New York

www.blumandpoe.com

  

CLEGG & GUTTMANN – MODERNISMO ITALIANO

Posted on 2019-08-19

Clegg & Guttmann’s constant artistic research, which draws on the archives of history to give shape to complex ideas and concepts, recreates the context in which Modernism developed in Italy, and it does so with powerful emotional overtones on the three foors of the gallery. It examines a period of great scientifc discoveries and philosophical speculation, of social and political change, of rapid industrial progress, and of creativity in art and literature, but also of ideological uncertainties and the rise of populism – many aspects that overlap with what we see in the world today. “A hundred years after the birth of Modernism”, the artists explain, “we fnd ourselves in a state of profound uncertainty about what answers to give to the most fundamental questions of ethics, aesthetics and politics”.

Clegg & Guttmann’s “modernist” reconstruction appears in a choral visual format with texts, images, objects and sounds that go back to some of the great names of the time. It starts in 1890 with Segantini’s Divisionism and then moves on to Luigi Russolo’s Futurist sound experiments, to the literary experiments of Giovanni Papini and Italo Svevo, reaching all the way to the visionary mathematician Bruno de Finetti’s theory of probability in the 1930s.

Opposite – Apples in a Chrome Bowl, 2019

Exhibition runs through to September 26th, 2019

Lia Rumma Gallery
Via Stilicone, 19
20154 Milan
Italy

www.liarumma.it

  

VOLUME FOUR, ISSUE NINE

Posted on 2019-08-14

Photography & Art content Paul Franco, Sophie Green, Keith Haring, Timothee Lambrecq, Jason Lee, Courtney MC, NASA.

Photography & Fashion content Hollie Fernando, Jens Ingversson, Quentin Jones, Kenneth Cappello, Jem Mitchell, Ben Parks, Michael Harrison Rudd, Hannah Scott Stevenson.

Available at exitmagazineshop.bigcartel.com