T–Zone
(June – July, 2005)
Artists: Anke Sievers, Richard Deon, Tara
Fracalossi, Erik Guzman,
Thomas Lail, Julie Langsam, Nickolas Lascot, Rob Lemon, Julie Mann,
Rune Olsen, Monika Sosnowski and Kikuko Tanaka
Curated by Peter Dudek
June 4th - July 17th, 2005
Architecture and autobiography, fiction and fantasy, taxidermy and zoology
all pair off and collide in T-Zone. Through an embroiling intentionality
and purposeful entanglement awkward unions are explored and made profoundly
present. Dissimilarity and the apparent lack of commonality bring together
a diverse range of practitioners. Presenting sculptures, photographs, drawings,
websites, videos, paintings, each and every one with little topic or content
similarity, yet boldly embedded throughout the T-Zone.
Anke Sievers. Although made from the perspective of a
dead person remembering a failed life filled with nostalgia, fear and confusion,
Anke's recent paintings, drawings and embroideries are remarkably humorous
and lovely to look at. This implausibly cheerful miscellany of lighter-than-air
arabesques defies gravitas and the deadly silence of an otherworldly vacuum.
She is from Germany and did medieval studies while a student in Holland.
Richard Deon. Richard has made a large body of heroic
and unseen canvases (richarddeon.com). For his paintings he reworks images
from 1950's high school textbooks creating what he calls "Social Surrealism".
By fusing images of colonial exploitation, urban delinquency and stiff academic
or corporate authority figures, an uneasy pictorial absurdity is achieved.
Tara Fracalossi. Tara has been obsessively assembling
an archive of images (found, as well as ones taken by herself) that she
selectively exhibits in multi-thematic arrangements. As presented, the photos
are uncompromisingly deadpan and steady in their narrative ambiguity. In
her studio "the archive" is housed in boxes (also shown at the
exhibitions) that often act as pedestals for the images.
Erik Guzman. Erik is a sculptor of kinetic forms (erikguzman.com).
He is also a founder of Goliath, a Brooklyn based artist collective (goliath777.com).
In his sculpture exquisitely crafted forms of glass and metal are slowly
animated. These closely calibrated sequential actions lead to an elegant
yet Sisyphean repetitions of tasks -- a never-ending, never complete rotation
of actions.
Thomas Lail. Thom's installations combine a wry and subtle
analysis of space with an aggressive use of form and material. A raw yet
studied architectural aesthetic that psycho/physically alters the space
of the gallery and viewer. Pushing the mind/body split into the fractured
realm of a gypsum board Dr. Calagari.
Julie Langsam. Julie is a New York City native and painter
who splits her time between New York and Cleveland, where she teaches. Her
experiences of living in both the center and the periphery of the art world
have influenced her paintings. Alienation and prominence, isolation and
distinction await her subjects, iconic forms selected from the history of
art and architecture.
Nickolas Lascot. Nick is developing a drawing and sculptural
bestiary. These creatures celebrate and perform for reasons perhaps known
only to them. Nick's blending of Social Darwinism and The Wonderful World
of Disney provokes a struggle of the not so fit. He works a semi-functional
and sometimes disgruntled cast of characters, oblivious to the needs of
others, caught in a world indifferent to their situation.
Rob Lemon. For the last 8 years Rob has been busy constructing
his own worldview (yleg.com). He has produced several books full of explanatory
text and complex drawings that reveal individuals uniquely capable of populating
a new Oz. At yelg.com the Noseless Man, the Ephemeral Enabler and other
members of their tribe are depicted in animated drawings, which further
expose their behavioral traits, historical roles and evolutionary fate.
This burgeoning populace is allegorically presented in his sculpture, a
structure that Jules Verne would fancy.
Julie Mann. This Julie is from Washington State and lives
in NYC. The remoteness of her early years on the Pacific Rim has infused
her work with an outsider perspective and the sophisticated feel of a self-taught
specialist. A radical taxidermist of articular forms she has just begun
to exhibit her work (julieannemann.com), which is rife with the gothic touch
of one who makes her sculptures from bones purchased on eBay.
Rune Olsen. Norway has given us Rune. Present day cultural
norms, as examined and looked at through aggressive animal behavior is his
forte. Physical to the extreme despite their commonplace materiality, his
sculptures' often-violent postures provoke a gyroscopic disturbance to the
viewer's balance. A yin-yang of the creator/destroyer sensibility plays
out in this feral theatre in the round.
Monika Sosnowski. Since the mid 90's Monika has been busy
producing several distinctly different bodies of photographic work. Hauntingly
beautiful color photographs of interiors; grainy black and white images
of people and places; and more recently, she has been manipulating found
images into albums of fictitious yet empathetic narratives; narratives that
simultaneously engage and withhold.
Kikuko Tanaka. Kikuko's art delivers an erotic jolt to
the man/nature imbalance. She works this territory through her photographic,
sculptural and video projects, all of which reveal a keen sense for craft
and presentation. These complex works are infused with a material self-awareness
and a bold sexuality. She is from Japan where she studied architecture before
coming to the U.S to make sculpture.
T-Zone is the second in a series of exhibitions being curated by Peter
Dudek where artists, whose work is seemingly, and quite probably, completely
unrelated to each other, are invited to interact (participate) in a group
exhibition. The first exhibition, entitled Confabulations, was held at Hunter
College in the fall of 2003 and the third will be at the Lab gallery (NYC)
in July 2005, a fourth will be at the Saratoga Arts Center in September.
Peter Dudek is a sculptor and independent curator (peterdudek.com).
He teaches at Hunter College and the School of Visual Arts. He is currently
the Director of Exhibitions for the Sculptors Guild.
Return to T-Zone images.
|