David Opdyke

Manifest Destination
September 6 – October 11, 2008


Ad in Artforum September 2008
The Brooklyn Rail (Bui)

Installation view south gallery with
Ebb and Flow on back wall

Ebb and Flow, 2008
(detail)
painted urethane foam and plastic
28 x 13 feet (installation variable dimensions)


Zenith, 2008
painted plastic, foam and wood
52 x 83 1/2 x 42 inches

Zenith (detail), 2008

Nadir, 2008
painted plastic, foam and wood
29 x 66 1/2 x 31 inches

Nadir (detail), 2008

Dredge, 2007
Styrofoam, plastic, and rocks in two vitrines
106 x 31 x 69 inches

Dredge (detail), 2007

Curio Failures, 2008
painted urethane foam, plastic,
and wood
80 x 31 x 9 inches


Curio Failures (details), 2008

Diminishing Returns, 2008
paper, flock, MDF
4 x 6 x 5 inches

The Public Good, 2007
painted wood and plastic
12 x 12 x 6 inches

Listening, 2006
in on paper
18 x 21 inches

Mini Storage, 2008
ink on paper
17 x 20 inches

Click here for a PDF version of the following
Press Release.
For Immediate Release: September 11, 2008

DAVID OPDYKE

MANIFEST DESTINATION

September 6 – October 11

I am interested in the tension between the authority of a believable image and the absurdity of that image’s content.

-David Opdyke, New York, 2008

Ronald Feldman Fine Arts is pleased to announce Manifest Destination, an exhibition of recent sculptures and drawings by David Opdyke. A self-proclaimed “NPR junkie,” Opdyke deftly engages a wide range of contemporary themes with subtle humor and controlled chaos.

Opdyke’s process is open-ended; he begins with a few structural rules and a limited kit of components, and allows the work to grow intuitively. He likens the building process to metastasis: “a barely-controlled accumulation of elements leading to decisions and forms I would never have anticipated or predicted.” The result of this guided entropy is exemplified in large sculptures such as Zenith (2008) and Dredge (2007).

In direct juxtaposition to six large-scale sculptures, the artist will exhibit a group of miniature wall sculptures. Opdyke uses miniaturization to propose projects of absurd ambition and size while maintaining a sense of authenticity. "In the grown-up world, a scale model presents a convincing alteration of reality, conveying authority and the existence of a well-considered plan. At the same time, models are a branch of the toy family: they can lend their credibility to half-baked and preposterous schemes.”

Themes of accumulation and disarray are further developed in Opdyke’s drawings. A seemingly straightforward rendering of land masses, upon closer inspection, becomes heaps of empty packages and detritus, as seen in works like Mini Storage and Inventory (2008). The aggregation of objects can take over the characteristics of a landscape, forcing an inversion of foreground and background. We no longer encounter objects in a landscape, but a landscape of objects.

This is David Opdyke’s first solo exhibition with the Feldman Gallery. His work has previously been exhibited at the University at Albany Art Museum, the Chicago Cultural Center, P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center in New York, and the North Dakota Museum of Art. Mr. Opdyke received the Aldrich Emerging Artist Award from the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in 2004, and a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Sculpture in 2005.

Opening Reception: Saturday, September 6, 6-8pm. The exhibition runs through October 11th. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10am-6pm. Monday by appointment. For more information, contact Sarah Paulson at (212) 226-3232 or sarah@feldmangallery.com.

TOP
Copyright 2008 Ronald Feldman Fine Arts, Inc. Click here for more detailed information.