CHRIS SUCCO – LANGUAGE OF ELBOW

Posted on 2015-04-13

Succo will present new iterations of two series of works—the aforementioned ZigZag Paintings and a series of Untitled silkscreen paintings. Succo’s silkscreen paintings, made from images cut from magazines, suggest faded rock posters, or a cascade of images of a truant youth. Flirting with the history of the nude in painting, they are collages in impoverished grayscale, deadpan renderings of adolescent excesses glorified by rock ‘n’ roll.

Both series, created in a studio with a constant soundtrack, and titled with lines drawn from Succo’s own poetry, reverberate with energy and attitude. Together, they reflect on the act of painting in abstraction; in the context of their titles and Succo’s own history as a musician, are not unlike liner notes—on painting.

Exhibition runs from April 23rd to May 23rd, 2015

Almine Rech Gallery
20 Rue de l’Abbaye
Abdijstraat 20, 1050
Brussels

www.alminerech.com

  

MAX MASLANSKY

Posted on 2015-04-13

Jouissance will feature paintings made on found bed sheets, pillows, and curtains. Using these worn domestic textiles in place of traditional linen or canvas, Maslansky begins each work on a ground that has pre-existing visual information that is inextricably a part of the work. Employing a mixture of washy pigments and layers of gesso and color combined with areas of opaque, thick paint, Maslansky’s treatment of his medium renders his images of anonymous figures in various states of undress and sexually charged poses and activities in such a way that allows psychological and emotional readings of the found images he works from. Informed by Stanley Kubrick’s 1999 film Eyes Wide Shut, this body of work flirts with the concept of a fantasy turning into a nightmare.

Opposite – Six Women (half double bed), 2015

Exhibition runs through to May 16th, 2015

Honor Fraser Gallery
2622 S La Cienega Blvd
Los Angeles
CA 90034

www.honorfraser.com

  

MARKUS LUPERTZ – RETROSPECTIVE

Posted on 2015-04-13

This artist’s imagination and creativity have long made him a major figure on the European art scene, whose paintings, sculptures, drawings and poems involve a constant questioning of art and the role of the artist. Comprising some 140 iconic works, the exhibition retraces Lüpertz’s career from his most recent pieces – including the Arcadia series of 2012 – back to his beginnings in the 1960s.

Born in 1941, Markus Lüpertz began painting in a postwar German art climate dominated by American Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art. Like A.R Penck, Georg Baselitz and Jörg Immendorff, he broke free of these movements, blazing a trail of his own with a new, thoughtful idiom far removed from action and expressiveness. In 1964 his series of ‘dithyrambic’ paintings – the term was borrowed from Nietzsche – brought a return to figuration while enabling a personal contribution to the history of abstraction: working on very big canvases, he made simplification of shape and magnification of detail the sources of striking formal innovations.

In the late 1960s these large-format pictures increasingly included references to contemporary history in the form of ‘German motifs’ that included helmets treated with deliberately emphasised objectivity. In 1980 he began turning to mythological figures and other ancient subjects, making visual borrowings from such masters as Poussin, Goya and Courbet. On a broader front he set up a unique dialogue – between painting and sculpture, figuration and abstraction, past and present – that offered a fresh reading of the history of modern art.

A significant influence on recent generations of painters and sculptors, Markus Lüpertz has had major exhibitions in Bonn, Amsterdam, Madrid and elsewhere in Europe, but has never before been shown on this scale in France.

Opposite – Kopf, 1981

Exhibition runs from April 17th to July 19th, 2015

Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris
11 Avenue du Président Wilson
75116 Paris

www.mam.paris.fr

  

TOM LADUKE – CANDLES AND LASERS

Posted on 2015-04-06

This exhibition features new sculpture and paintings that subvert the conventions of these mediums to underscore the various conditions (psychological, material, social, formal) that work to obscure understanding and perception. This body of work will continue LaDuke’s existential investigation into the nature and location of the Self, as viewers are self-consciously confronting objects that intentionally veil their subject matter.
Tom LaDuke’s painstakingly constructed paintings also toy with the boundaries of perception and recognition. Layering representational scenes (from film and art history, for example), with bold abstraction, LaDuke negotiates between the conceptual, material, spatial and formal issues inherent in painting. Abstract expressions dance atop the most precisely rendered compositions, flattening the layers of the painting to a single plane. These fresh daubs of paint and glitter complicate the viewer’s ability to enter into the familiar representations, underscoring the artist’s exploration of reality versus perceived reality.

Opposite – Gloryhole, 2015

Exhibition runs through to May 16th, 2015

Kohn Gallery
1227 North Highland Ave
Los Angeles
CA 90038

www.kohngallery.com

  

JOHN GIORNO – SPACE FORGETS YOU

Posted on 2015-04-06

Giorno’s explosive, visual and concrete works continue in a new series of rainbow paintings that occupy the front gallery. Works such as LIVING IN YOUR EYES, LIFE IS A KILLER, and I
WANT TO CUM IN YOUR HEART coexist and resonate. The exhibit continues with two bodies of drawings, including THANX 4 NOTHING, GOD IS MANMADE, and IT’S WORSE THAN I THOUGHT. The devoted rooms to each series manifest the range and depth of Giorno’s creative production in painting, graphite, and watercolor. The pulsating delivery of Giorno’s reading style, with line breaks and repetition, dictate tempos within the exhibition and encourage reinvestigation of phrases.

Many of the texts employed in Giorno’s new works were originally sourced from poetry that the artist has written, or lines that never made themselves into a final poem. The clarity of the words’ visual impact hangs in the air and penetrates the mind. Giorno’s history with concrete poetry techniques date back to his first visual works in the late 1960s. The culmination of his practice today, can arguably be traced back to his first series, when Giorno was exploring the audio and visual perception of words on a field. This interest led to collaborations and sound recordings that further defined Giorno’s live performances.

Opposite – Life is a Killer, 2015

Exhibition runs through to May 9th, 2015

Elizabeth Dee
545 West 20th Street
NY 10011
New York

now.elizabethdee.com

  

DAVID MALJKOVIC

Posted on 2015-04-06

David Maljkovic is known for multifaceted exhibitions that investigate the erosion of memory and the corruption of information, revealing how ideas can be worn down by the effects of time and technology. For his second show at Sprüth Magers London, Maljkovic will present a group of inkjet photo collages titled New Reproduction (2013), as well as Afterform (2013), a single slide projection, and a new version of the HD video Out of Projection (2009-2014), a title that the artist has used for a number of previous, related works. The formal principle of collage is key to Maljkovic’s oeuvre: the artist has adopted this method as a way to respond to our defective memories, recombining photographs, films and projected images from his own personal archive.

Entering the main gallery space, the viewer will be struck by an overwhelming presence of a ghost from a previous exhibition: the artist has covered the main gallery walls with black-and-white, blown up installation photographs of his recent show at the Palais de Tokyo, Paris. The photographs depict a blank projection screen in an otherwise empty room, the concrete architecture and bare lighting suggestive of a large, utilitarian building. Transformed by the huge photographs, the gallery walls take on the illusion of an extended, institutional space, disrupting the spatial and historical coherence of the exhibition. The video Out of Projection , projected on the screen facing the entrance to the gallery, depicts retired engineers walking on a Peugeot test track in Sochaux, France. The overall texture of the moving image is dreamlike, yet also suggestive of a surveillance film, as the men and women walk in slow motion amongst futuristic cars, unaware that they are being filmed. This sense of dislocated time extends to the screen on the large wall, where Afterform, a single, unchanging slide, is projected. Maljkovic transformed a digital image of an earlier work into an analogue slide and projected it onto a facsimile screen from a previous exhibition.

Exhibition runs through to May 9th, 2015

Sprüth Magers London
7A Grafton Street
London
W1S 4EJ

www.spruethmagers.com