NEW YORK, NY.- Emmanuel Barbault, in collaboration with Almine Rech Gallery, is presenting an installation of new sculptures by Erik Lindman a first for an artist primarily known for his paintings alongside photographs in which these sculptures are activated by David Schoerner.
From an essay commissioned for this project, Alex Bacon writes: Lindmans work has, almost since the beginning, involved found objects. He has a keen eye for materials that might engender a good painterly and now sculpturalcomposition. Sometimes these materials have been included in paintings as compositional elements, while other times they are present only by implication, as a matrix through which an imprint is left, or a logic out of which a series of marks or gestures are laid down and developed
Lindmans sculpture is in many ways an extension of this practice, which has always driven how he has made his paintings. Most fundamentally it is a response to his desire to introduce multiple viewpoints into his work, an impulse that arose from a response to certain of the materials he came across, which he thought might be limited by the singular, two-dimensional plane of painting. Yet, the resulting sculptures very much betray a painterly eye. They present not so much a single, holistic object for our appreciation, but rather a series of sequential viewpoints, each distinct but similar to the others, encouraging our movement around the work so as to compare one to the next. This is provoked by the intimate, bodily scale of the works, which reveal the handling involved in their making, and invite their display in a domestic context, such as on a table top
[In Schoerners photographs] every work consists of three different kinds of objects. Schoerner photographs one by itself (A), then he photographs it with the next object (AB), and then he photographs the second object with the third object (BC), going on to repeat the approach so as to capture every possible combination: ABC, CAB, BCA, ACB, BAC, CBA, etc. In the present photographs Schoerner approaches Lindmans sculptures in the same way as the household items he has been photographing: systematically exploring them from every possible position in such a way that immediately reads as serial and exhaustive
Schoerners photographs of Lindmans sculptures propose a simultaneity that is implied by the works, but which transcends the ability of any one person to perceive in a single glance, as the grid of photographs makes possible.
Erik Lindman (b. 1985, New York) received his B.A. from Columbia University in 2007. Recent solo exhibitions include Erik Lindman, Almine Rech Gallery, New York (2017), Metal Paintings, Almine Rech Gallery, London (2016); and Torso, Ribordy Contemporary, Geneva (2016); He has been featured in group exhibitions throughout Europe and the U.S., including Expanding Frontiers: Propos dEurope 15, curated by Rolf Hoff, Foundation Hippocrène, Paris (2016); The Painter of Modern Life, curated by Bob Nickas, Anton Kern Gallery, New York (2015); Pour une Grammaire du Hasard, curated by Corinne Charpentier, Fri Art Centre dart de Fribourg / Kunsthalle Freiburg, Switzerland (2012); and Golden Age: Reference Work, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2011). Lindman lives and works in New York.