Todd Siler

Split <-> Second
May 14– June 18, 2011

The Villager


Artforum ad May 2010


Installation view south gallery


Installation view south gallery


Love (Thalamus), 2009-2011
mixed media on synthetic canvas

71 x 181 inches

 

 



Power (Papez Circuit) 2009-2011
mixed media on synthetic canvas
59 x 132 inches


Intuition (Limbic System), 2000-2011
mixed media on synthetic canvas

62 x 183 inches

Aggression (Amygdala), 2000-2011
mixed media on synthetic canvas
59 x 106 inches


Making Connections (Entorhinal Cortex),
2000-2011
mixed media on synthetic canvas
59 x 155 inches

 


Our Triune Brain, 2000-2011
mixed media on synthetic canvas
67 x 138 inches



Neural Fragments, 2000-2009
mixed media on synthetic canvas
59 x 211 inches

Mind & Matter Fields of Influences
2009-2011
mixed media on synthetic canvas
59 x 100 1/2 inches

Tachistoscope Projections,2011
mixed media on paper
15 x 22 inches


Revolutions, 2011
collage on giclee monotype print

18 x 28 5/8 inches


Evolution of Human Knowledge, 2010-2011
mixed media on paper
22 x 35 inches

Evolution of Abstract Realism, 2010-2011
mixed media on paper
22 x 35 inches
Click here for a PDF version of the following Press Release

                                                                                                 For immediate release: April 22,
                                                         
TODD SILER                                                                        
SPLIT<-> SECOND
May 14 - June 18     
                             

  “…science gathers knowledge faster than society gathers wisdom.”  Isaac Asimov  
                                                      

Split <-> Second, Todd Siler’s ninth exhibition at the Feldman Gallery, includes paintings, sculptures, and drawings that take as their subject the processes of the brain and its connection with the physical laws of nature.   An artist with a background in brain science, Siler transforms the gallery space into an observatory for contemplating what our eyes may not see but our intuitions can sense: life-changing events happen in less than a split-second. This rapidly changing reality makes countless critical decisions increasingly difficult especially as we respond to global challenges that impact our present-future.

Abstract paintings interpret the fluid actions of neural tissue that has been greatly magnified – revealing a hidden world of biologically-driven feelings that form and influence the complexity of our lives every second.  Free-standing, seven-foot tall sculpted photographs, consisting of compressed and elongated metaphorical images, symbolize the 11-dimensional “strings” of matter that theoretically link everything in physical reality.  These evocative photosculptures make the unrolled, unfolded, and enlarged strings of mind visible in order to glimpse the natural forces that shape every aspect of our world and existence.

Siler’s collage drawings take us below the cerebral cortex into the wilds of the Limbic system and lower into the heart of the “interbrain” (diencephalon) and deeper, where visceral feelings, churning emotions, and involuntary actions can drive our actions into chaos in a matter of milliseconds; instantly turning them from rational to irrational, kindness to killing.  The drawings illuminate the uncertainty and unpredictability of synaptic flow, which controls our creativity, humanity, and civil society.

Split-second projections of subliminal images flash on the surfaces of various paintings.  The biological roots of impulses that ignite our most self-destructive tendencies are depicted by a listless rhinoceros, butting his head against a closed iron door, evoking Ionesco’s The Theater of the Absurd. 

In the face of its precarious future, Siler envisions the human race as the most endangered species, one that is propelled by its quest for power and love which race through our central nervous systems.  He questions whether we can reverse the brain’s irrationalities and primal instincts, and wonders if we’ll be agile enough and wise enough to dodge nature’s demonstratively negative forces that can extinguish our dreams in a split<->second.   

The Feldman Gallery has represented Todd Siler since 1981.  His work is in the collections of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.  His published works include Breaking the Mind Barrier (Simon & Schuster), Think Like a Genius (Bantam Books), and numerous articles in international art and science journals.  A Forum Fellow and presenter at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Siler holds a number of patents on a wide range of inventions.  He received his PhD in Interdisciplinary Studies in Psychology and Art from MIT.

There will be a reception May 14, 6 - 8.  Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 - 6.  Monday by
appointment.  For more information, contact Sarah Paulson at (212) 226-3232 or sarah@feldmangallery.com.

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