PEANA opens a solo exhibition of works by Leo Marz curated by Laura Orozco
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 21, 2024


PEANA opens a solo exhibition of works by Leo Marz curated by Laura Orozco
Installation View. Futuristic Flower, 2022.



MONTERREY.- PEANA is presenting Futuristic Flower, a solo exhibition by Leo Marz curated by Laura Orozco. Futuristic Flower explores the visibility and circulation of everyday objects and those that derive from the artistic endeavor; and reviews how both operate and present themselves in the world, as well as in the exhibition hall through contemporary visual languages. The proposal highlights the points of convergence between the different approaches and interests that the artist has developed in his latest projects, such as the legacy of the history of painting in our present, the construction and ambiguity of the image, as well as the implications of the display in our way of perception.

The interest in pictorial practice has been present —in one way or another— in all of Marz’s work; from questioning the function of the medium within cinematographic narratives, to confronting the canvas itself and producing paintings of diverse scales based on minimal gestures and games that wander between abstraction and figuration, as well as absence and presence. His practice can be thought from the crossings between the historical or canonical referents of painting and the unstable languages of the new audiovisual and digital media. The small format paintings are based on quick observational drawings, where the artist generates variations and dislocations between the traditional still life painting and the fragmented and sequenced operations of the contemporary image. Similarly, in Amazon Loop from the series Las batallas de display, Marz isolates and extracts the display from the Amazon website and turns it into a large-scale abstract painting, questioning the limits or possible dialogues between pictorial representation and graphic design, the wallpaper and the film or theatrical set, as well as the digital support and the canvas.

Si cierras los ojos, desapareces, a diptych made with acrylic on canvas, is a translation that reviews the components of the image and how it operates in relation to human and social interactions. The grid in the work comes from a background used by digital applications such as Photoshop to represent the absence of information, that is, the non-existence of the image. The gesture of creating a painting whose subject is the lack of its own image creates a tension between presence and absence, which alludes to the binary mode of representation and transmission of information within digital technologies. The translation of the digital to the materiality of the canvas generates a transparent or invisible painting, deprived of its apparently perfect composition based on the pixel —a unique color entity—, the image is created from the careful but asymmetrical manual handling that characterizes the pictorial gesture. The invention of television made possible the leap between cinematographic and digital languages, since it gave rise to the electronic signal and therefore to the construction of the image through sweeps of information that are configured vertically (from top to bottom), which becomes a flattened image due to its technical impossibility of depth of field, thus allowing the massive entry of the close up, which is appropriated by the logics of digital technologies as the primary image of use to observe, record and interact. The piece is also a selfie in movement, and the difference between each of the paintings that make up the diptych is the almost imperceptible change implied by the blinking.




The theme of absence is also present in the sculptures in the show. Rolling Chair Mat (for Hardwood Floor), is a glass copy of an office chair mat, Twin Double Spoon Rest is a bronze sculpture of a double spoon rest.1 Made from a reproduction of an object purchased through Amazon, this piece looks like a petal resting on a chroma green pole. Rather than “being”, the work “appears”. The green screen support serves as a footnote, and hints that the image of this piece is not finished, as that green chroma space is going to be replaced by something else, and “in reality” the object is floating in space four meters above the ground. Last on the list of three-dimensional objects is Yoga Swing Bracket, a bronze imitation of a reinforced wall bracket for suspension ropes.2 All three works come from objects that were produced to enable the existence of something else. We could say that they are wallpapers, green screen paint, Photoshop grids, dependent beings. What happens if these “nothings” become “somethings”? What would be its purpose for existence now? Does the status of artwork or monument grant them a new autonomy?

The condition of objects —as well as nature— as subjects of appropriation by man, is evident throughout the history of art. Examples of this are still lifes, landscapes, and other motifs that have been pretexts for pictorial production at the service of human visual pleasure. However, there have also been other approaches. In 1949 the film Late Spring by the Japanese Yasujiro Ozu was released. In this movie we find a long and fixed shot of the domestic environment, where we see a pot, a rug, a window and the shadows of plants reflected on the wall. In this context, a cinematographic shot with these characteristics that shows “nothing” is highly unusual. It makes no sense to suspend or prolong time within the economic logics of cinema so as not to advance within the narrative. This fact serves as an introduction to the central work of the exhibition in question. From an intervention on the gallery wall, Marz dialogues with the history of cinematographic representation and transfers it to pictorial practice through muralism, with a piece that advances at a different speed and plays with the variation of scales, which confuses our gaze, presenting a scene that seems to be observed by someone non-human. As a mirror, the work And Click—and Suddenness investigates how we experience time and space. It shows us the difference and tension between the “real” and its representation in the audiovisual media. At the same time, it makes use of a scene where nothing seems to happen, of negative or lost time; it gives us a moment of reality—life is full of suspended moments—, of frozen times, of spaces full of past actions. The drawing made with charcoal is the result of the superposition of two spaces, the domestic and the museum, in which through an editing exercise—of elimination of elements—the artist puts in conflict the exact translation of subjects and objects. A labyrinthine painting, which refers us to the digital apparatus and the logics of the hyperlink. The piece is transformed over time, it is an image in process that from the minimum change invites us to take a closer look at what seems peaceful, daily or fixed.

1 Commercial name of the object. See in:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01GQ4BYOY/ref=cm_sw_em_r_mt_dp_4GSZCBBJ4DBA8AGJEMA

2 Trade name of the object. See at: https://www.amazon.com.mx/dp/B08XMZH95Z?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share










Today's News

February 7, 2022

James Demark

Why does the demolition of a Marcel Breuer house matter?

Chromophilia: Exhibition at Hauser & Wirth brings together paintings, collages, sculptures and installations

A music museum opens in the heart of Hungary's culture wars

Dallas Museum of Art organizes first museum retrospective for Octavio Medellín

Galerie Templon exhibits a series of major works created between 1973 and 2011 by Anthony Caro

'Guernica' anti-war tapestry is rehung at U.N.

Brody returns to his first love: Painting

Stephen Friedman Gallery opens its first solo exhibition with British artist Holly Hendry

Love Hurts, Yeah Yeah" A Valentine to the funny and twisted side of love

PEANA opens a solo exhibition of works by Leo Marz curated by Laura Orozco

Major exhibition of the Japanese avant-garde on view at Zach Ě ta - National Gallery of Art

Solo exhibition of new work by Michael E. Smith on view at Modern Art

Haarlem Gallery presents works by thirteen artists that explore land, intuition & natural phenomena

Detroit Institute of Arts opens "By Her Hand: Artemisia Gentileschi and Women Artists in Italy, 1500-1800"

George Crumb, eclectic composer who searched for sounds, dies at 92

A new exhibition by award-winning Angolan artist Cristiano Mangovo opens in Lisbon

Frank Perrin opens his first solo exhibition with Michel Rein

"Mary Frank: The Observing Heart," opens at The Dorsky Museum

Lata Mangeshkar, singing voice for generations of Bollywood actresses, dies at 92

From Chad, a filmmaker and a star committed to telling stories of home

Sam Lay, drummer who backed blues greats and Bob Dylan, dies at 86

Book traces the statues, monuments, and buildings built by North Korea in Africa from the 1970s to the present

How Yiddish scholars are rescuing women's novels from obscurity

Memory Leaks Interview with Pritika Chowdhry and Francesca Ramsay




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful