Taking Shape

June 25-July 29, 2011

 

Installation view north gallery

Installation view north gallery

Installation view south gallery

Installation view south gallery

Joseph Beuys

 


Pala from 7000 Oaks, 1983
wrought iron shovel with ash wood
handle

53 x 1 1/2 inches
edition of 35

 

 


Noiseless Blackboard Erasers, 1974
felt blackboard erasers
2 x 5 x 1 inches each
edition of 550

Rose for Direct Democracy, 1987
500 ml graduated cylinder with
incised text
13 1/2 x 2 inch diameter
unlimited edition


Erased Blackboard, 1974
from the "Public Dialogue with Joseph Beuys"
at the New School Auditorium, New York
media chalk on blalckboard
72 x 48 x 1 inches

 

Chris Burden Hannah Wilke


Relic: Prelude to 220 or 110, 1987
(F Space, Santa Ana, CA, September 10-12, 1971)
copper neckband on velvet covered base in
Plexiglas box

11 x 15 1/4 x 8 1/4 inches

 


Primary Life, 1983-92
acrylic on 9 ceramic sculptures on 9 wood bases
59 x 59 x 7 inches
Rico Gatson  

Magic Stick #3, 2009
painted wood
88 x 20 x 20 inches

Separatist Celebration, 2004
wood sculpture and light bulbs
102 1/2 x 46 x 35 1/4 inches
  Christine Hill

Auction Block, 2009
latex paint on plywood, light bulbs
24 1/2 x 25 x 48 1/2 inches

PR Portable Office from
Home Office Trunk Series
, 2003
trunk (closed): 59 x 27 x 14 inches
pedestal: 30 x 49 x 10 inches

Pepón Osorio

 


Untitled, 2003
(detail)
1 of seven figures
cast plaster and assemblage with lettering

5 1/2 x 3 x 3 inches each

 


Untitled, 2003
(detail)
1 of seven figures
cast plaster and assemblage with lettering

5 1/2 x 3 x 3 inches each
Kelly Heaton  


N-Trophy, 2000-2003
1 of 61 Tickle Me Elmos purchased on eBay
and then mounted on custom-made trophy plaques
with brass engraved labels which state the date,
location
of the seller, and auction number of
the auction at which the Elmo was orignally purchased.
9 x 10 1/2 x 5 1/2 inches each

The completed plaques were then put on eBay at an auction
which opened on September 5 and closed on October 11,
2003.
This plaque was purchased at that auction.

 


Case of the Disembowelled Doll
(English spelling) from the Live Pelt
Installation
, 2003

 

Roxy Paine

 


Scumak Green 1, 2000
polyethylene sculpture from SCU-MAK
autosculpture maker
9 x 16 x 10 inches

Scumak Orange 2, 2000
polyethylene sculpture from SCU-MAK
autosculpture maker
13 x 13 x 8 inches

Sam Van Aken

 


Hybrid 132, 2010
vinyl, acrylic, polyurethane, styrene


Hybrid 187, 2010
vinyl, acrylic, polyurethane, styrene


Hybrid 337, 2010
vinyl, acrylic, polyurethane, styrene

Hybrid 59, 2010
vinyl, acrylic, polyurethane, styrene
   

Click here for a PDF version of the following Press Release.

For immediate Release:  June 3, 2011

TAKING SHAPE

Joseph Beuys / Chris Burden / Rico Gatson / Kelly Heaton / Christine Hill / Pepón Osorio /
Roxy Paine / Sam Van Aken / Hannah Wilke

June 25 - July 29

Ronald Feldman Fine Arts will exhibit Taking Shape, a group show of sculptural works from 1974 to 2011 by artists associated with the gallery.  Limited to objects that possess shaperather than depict it, the selected works include traditionally-crafted sculptures and transformed ready-mades that comment on a wide-range of pertinent social issues, from a variety of perspectives. 

The exhibition features Joseph Beuys’ Noiseless Blackboard Eraser (1974), Pala from 7000 Oaks (1983), and Rose for Direct Democracy (1987) that relate to Beuys’ public dialogues and communal activism.  Relic: Prelude to 220 or 110 (1976) recalls Chris Burden’s early performances based on self-inflicted dangers to protest the status quo.  Hannah Wilke’s sculpture, Primary Life (1983-92), celebrates female sexuality and, by extension, pursues possibilities for equality in all realms.

Other works in the exhibition are a response to an ever-rising tide of consumerism.  Transformed Elmo dolls from Kelly Heaton’s large-scale exhibition, Live Pelt (2003), trace American commercialism from its fur trade to online commerce.  Christine Hill’s PR Portable Office (2003) promotes a cottage industry entrepreneurial spirit as an alternative to corporate might.  Addressing complex racial issues, Pepón Osorio’s plaster cast figures of black men, Untitled (2003), depict the loss of the authentic self in a racially divided society.  Rico Gatson’s Separatist Celebration (2004) is a metaphor for racial divisiveness, but in these times, also points to our political and economic dissolution.  Gatson’s African-inspired Magic Stick #3 (2009) is a counter-reaction to the memories of racial injustices which can never be fully understood or forgiven.

Roxy Paine and Sam Van Aken are each represented by variations of unique objects.  Paine’s blob-like Scumaks (manufactured by his Auto SCUlpture MAKer) and Van Akens’ Hybrids (sculptures of mutant fruit) both explore the relationship between the artificial and the natural in an increasingly technological age.  Van Aken’s Hybrids are closely related to his New Edens series of grafted trees, exhibited at the 2011 Armory Show to critical acclaim.  Sharon Corwin at the Colby College Museum of Art writes:  There is a blatant sexuality to the hybrids especially evident in the combination of an apple and a strawberry.  And yet while Van Aken’s mutant fruit might elicit laughter, it is also quite horrifying in the context of our genetically modified world.

Taking Shape describes a formative moment: the beginning of a process that will lead to something new in the end.  In the face of today’s global challenges, the exhibition highlights the relevance of these artists’ themes to our current state of transition, which contains dangers as well as opportunities.  

The exhibition is curated by Scott Vincent Campbell.

There will be an opening reception Saturday, June 25, 6 - 8.   Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Saturday, 10- 6 Monday by appointment.  July: Monday – Thursday, 10 - 6.  Friday, 10 - 3.  For more information, contact Sarah Paulson (212) 226-3232 or sarah@feldmangallery.com.


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Copyright 2011 Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, Inc. Click here for more detailed information.