NEW YORK, NY.- Hollis Taggart announced representation of artist William Buchina, whose paintings meld a wide spectrum of images, symbols, and references into Surrealist-style amalgamations. The gallery has previously included Buchina in a range of exhibitions, including most recently in Highlight: Chelsea in fall 2018. With the rapid expansion of its contemporary program and primary market business under Hollis Taggart Contemporary, the gallery is now formalizing its relationship with the artist. To mark the new collaboration, the gallery will feature a selection of Buchinas works in a two-person exhibition in January 2020, which will be presented at its space dedicated to contemporary art on W. 25th. This will be followed by a solo presentation at Hollis Taggarts flagship location on W. 26th in June 2020. The news follows the announcement that André Hemer joined the program in August 2019.
Drawing on an ever-evolving archive of imagery and text, Buchina creates acrylic paintings and ink drawings that comment on the transient and inexplicable points where the banal and commonplace meet the inconceivable and bizarre, focusing in particular on the vast expanse of human ritual. The discovery, examination, and editing of these visual and conceptual references is as significant to Buchinas creative process as applying his materials to canvas and paper. Drawn in particular to gatherings of people, mundane substances and tools, and gestures that straddle the sensitive and aggressive, Buchina renders his figuresas well as the surrounding objects and spacesin fine, graphic detail. At the same time, he alters, cuts, recombines, and layers these elements to emphasize and contrast actions and experiences, creating an array of emotional and psychological effects. Swaths of flat bright colors are further added, giving the overall compositions dimension and suggesting the visual quality of a collage.
Recently, Buchina has been working with images of figures joining together, whether for religious ceremonies, political rallies, marshal interventions, or other social situations. In Buchinas paintings, the figures are removed from their contexts, relieved of their personalities, and re-configured in dense compositions that give his works a tense and hectic quality. Buchinas further incorporation of people in varying acts of praise, reverence, or allegiance gives the scenes an additional unsettling quality and suggest political critiquealthough the exact intention is obscured. The remixing of original sources often results in absurdist juxtapositions, further disjointing any sense of narrative within the paintings. In this way, Buchinas work is a kind of anthropological study of human behavior and response to a variety of stimuli.
Williams work is so dynamic in its layering of content. You can return to it many times and it will continue to reveal intricate and subtle fragments and moments, which are in turn funny, strange, unsettling, and pointed. In this way, there is a clear connection to the Surrealist landscapeevery time you think youve grasped it, it slips away, said Hollis Taggart. We have been working with William for a number of years, and we are delighted to formally bring him into our program. We look forward to his upcoming exhibitions, and to engaging our audiences with his deeply compelling practice.
William Buchina (b. 1978) has been the subject of solo and group exhibitions in locations across Berlin, Istanbul, London, Los Angeles, New York, and Paris, as well as other cities in the U.S. His most recent solo presentation, titled Between Objects & Actions, opened this year at SLAG Gallery in Brooklyn. He holds a BFA from Pratt Institute. He lives and works in Brooklyn.