Archive for February, 2014

PATRICK JACOBS @ MONTSERRAT COLLEGE OF ART

February 25, 2014  |  NEWS  |  No Comments  |  Share

MADE

January 21 – March 29, 2014

 

Montserrat College of Art is proud to present MADE an exhibition curated by Gallery Director, Leonie Bradbury. While the title implies a bold “stamp” of fabrication, where the physical product is the achievement, MADE is a look beneath the surface. Each impeccably made work reveals themselves as what they first seem upon further inspection. Bradbury features mixed-media artists, Alexa Meade (Los Angeles, CA), Patrick Jacobs (Brooklyn, NY), Antoniadis & Stone (Boston, MA) and Kelli Connell (Chicago, IL). Bradbury adopts the Freudian concept of the “uncanny,” a term used to describe the instance where something is familiar, yet foreign at the same time. That feeling of teetering between two states, or re-examining the present, is precisely what this exhibition achieves through a multitude of themes such as: exterior and interior, illusion and truth, handmade and fabricated.

Kelli Connell and Alexa Meade seesaw the limitations and extremities of portraiture. Kelli Connell became a photographer to explore how photos could raise questions, specifically those based around identity, gender roles and the individual. Layering multiple photographic negatives, the composited portraits can be interpreted as, “an image about a relationship between two people, and as an image about multiple sides of the self” explains Connell. She captures the intersection of fact and fiction much alike Alexa Meade. Painting directly on live models and real world objects, Meade works in reverse from the classical concept of trompe l’oeil (the art of making something two-dimensional appear three-dimensional). She collapses real world depth into what appears as flat representations. Her work is visually stunning and layered in illusion. “Come Down” is an electric street scene paired with a figure floating in an urban paradise. The man, static in mid-air, would not be realized as an actual live model in a photograph, if not for the minuscule corner of ankle flesh unpainted and exposed between his shoe and pant leg.

Brooklyn-based sculptor Patrick Jacobs creates hyperrealist dioramas create a multitude of subconscious layers. Built directly into the gallery wall, at first glance the viewer sees only a porthole. Stepping closer, the circle becomes a looking glass through which a crisp, precise “photographic” landscape image appears. But, in fact the “photograph” is a manually constructed sculptural environment made from a variety of materials including paper and plastic. The conscious present is inverted as the viewer realizes they are a prop in Jacobs’ dance between worlds. Jacobs’ highly crafted work is contained to a controlled environment. In contrast, Antoniadis and Stone’s work takes on a larger than life form, grandiose in scale. Antoniadis & Stone is a collaborative enterprise. The vision of Alexi Antoniadis and Nico Stone is a representation of combined consciousness and a shared interest in the investigation of reality. Their site specific installation, “Promised Land” can be described as an alternative, dystopic landscape, one where office park aesthetics have met with disaster. Reflective glass windows, steel beams appear to have landed as if dropped off a building to form an immersive environment for the viewer. Their scale implies a cumbersome weight, but are these works as they seem? As with all the works in MADE, things are not always what they seem.

“Promised Land” is a newly commissioned work by Antoniadis & Stone that has been made possible through a generous grant from the Artist’s Resource Trust (A.R.T) Fund for Individuals by the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation.

23 ESSEX ST.

BEVERLY, MA 01915

THE HIDDEN SHOW Part II, NEW YORK

THE HIDDEN SHOW Part II, NEW YORK

February 25, 2014  |  NEWS  |  No Comments  |  Share

THE POOL NYC is pleased to announce THE HIDDEN SHOW part two, a group exhibition featuring Eteri Chkadua, Eric Mistretta, Andrea Salvatori, and Bianca Sforni to be held at Design-Apart, the temporary space of the gallery in the city, in Chelsea.
Design-Apart is a new NY reality and it has been elected as the perfect venue for the nomadic show of THE POOL NYC, as their mission is extremely related to the crucial goals of the gallery. Both Design-Apart and THE POOL NYC want to showcase the best and the more hidden of contemporary art and design, focusing on the quality of the objects and art works on display. Both projects are global and local, they travel and they stop in places they consider essential.
Design-Apart delivers bespoke Italian design around the world with a team of artisans who integrate advanced technologies with ancient traditions, producing furniture and objects of uncommon utility and beauty. Design-Apart showroom in NYC is a platform in which the founders live, cook, work, and invite artists, chefs, clients to create and collaborate with them.
The gallery aims at displaying the work of four artists internationally renowned, all related one another for their quality and manufacture, and various media, in conversation in New York with design, in a new context and where all the different media can be highly appreciated.
The show has been named after the selection of the venue and this time we would like our collectors to see the works of art already placed in a living space, actually a gorgeous apartment.
In order to show difference with the typical white cube of gallery spaces, we will show the works of the artists we work with in a domestic environment, furnished and unusual.
American artist Eric Mistretta will be on display at Design-Apart with a new series of Apex works made of nylon, all sold out in Miami.
Andrea Salvatori, one of the Italian artists of the gallery, will be back in New York for the second time with his exquisite glazed ceramic pieces. For this show he will showcase a new series of vases made of glass and ceramic and an elephant with balls.
Eteri Chkadua, a Georgian painter who has been working with the gallery for ever, will present two small works where she portraits herself.
Chkadua is currently on display at the Museum of Modern Art of Istanbul.
Bianca Sforni, an Italian artist who works with a 4×5 camera, and lives between New York and Paris, presents a wide range of photographs from the Pandora’s Box Series to the Poppies Series, and the famous Broken Teapot and a black and white piece named Hugoton. Through Bianca’s camera, flowers, plants and natural objects assume appealing shapes and become icons.

It will be open every day from 12  to 6 pm and by appointment.

For further information, you can contact the gallery directors Luigi Franchin and Viola Romoli:

info@thepoolnewyorkcity.com

Luigi +1 646 244 9783

Viola +1 347 257 4103

www.design-apart.com

May  5 – 24, 2014

THE POOL NYC

at Design-Apart,

110 W 25th St. 2nd Floor

New York, NY 10001, USA