ATHENS.- The exhibition Steven Shearer: Sleep, Deaths Own Brother, now on view at
The George Economou Collection, takes as its point of departure Sleep II (2015), a monumental collage made up of thousands of found imagesall of them JPEGs sourced online depicting people asleep. A breathtaking tour de force balancing color, scale, structure, and subject matter, the sprawling mosaic shows a wide variety of somnolent states, from the peaceful and the comedic to the ecstatic and downright morbid. Titled after a line from Hesiods eighth-century BC epic poem Theogony (Harmful Night, veiled in dusky fog, carries in her arms Sleep, Deaths own brother), the exhibition revolves around this uneasy proximity (brotherhood) between death and sleep, a recurring trope in Shearers art. Built around the George Economou Collections substantial holdings of Steven Shearers work in painting and printed matter, Sleep, Deaths Own Brother proposes an in-depth look at the oeuvre of this Vancouver-based artist from the transgressive thematic perspective of the lifeless body, which is sometimes truly, sometimes only seemingly dead.
Steven Shearer first gained renown in the early 2000s with a range of works rooted in his deeply personal affinity with seventies teen culture and the proletarian aesthetic of the global metal underground, which the artist continues to mine for iconographic references, however serendipitous, to canonical art history. One of the earliest works in the exhibition, Man Sitting (2006), is exemplary of his transhistorical strategy of image-making: while the source for the painting is a grainy black-and- white photograph of a long-haired shirtless drummer behind his kit, Shearer transforms the image into a hieratic portrait of a brooding youth sitting inside a claustrophobic interior, with delirious echoes of the world of Edvard Munch. (This same Munchian gloom informs the portrait The Sickly Fauve (2014).)
Shearers frequent references to the gothic sensibility of late medieval Old Master painting and visual culture reflect the morbid preoccupations of his subject matter; like the ballpoint drawing Band (2004), based on an infamous group portrait ofnomen est omendeath metal pioneers Obituary, hanging from nooses. Band appears in the exhibition beside another macabre masterpiece from the George Economou Collection, Rudolf Schlichters watercolor drawing The Artist with Two Hanged Women (1924), while similarly lugubrious works by Schlichters contemporary Otto Dix provide further historical backstory. Death, of course, is one of art historys truly immortal concerns.
In two of Shearers most ambitious recent paintings, Atheists Commission (2018) and Potter (2021), Christological overtones temper the references from pop culture, reminding us that the brotherhood between death and sleep is one of the founding principles of the legend of Christ. Whence the bedside mourning for Christ in Andrea Mantegnas painting Lamentation over the Dead Christ (ca. 1480): Do the Virgin Mary and Saint John not realize He might be merely asleep?
At the entrance of the exhibition, a small-scale, red-toned portrait, The Green Collector (2021), who clutches a diminutive blue model, welcomes the viewer to Shearers world. Once inside, the spell of Hypnos works its magicalong with arts uncanny powers to bring the inanimate to life.
The exhibition is curated by Dieter Roelstraete in close collaboration with the artist and Skarlet Smatana, Director of the George Economou Collection. A publication with essays by Roelstraete, Nicholas Cullinan and Silvia Montiglio will accompany the exhibition. Dieter Roelstraete is curator of the Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society at the University of Chicago, where he also teaches. Recent exhibitions at the Neubauer Collegium have featured the work of Ida Applebroog, Anna Daucikova and Assaf Evron, Jason Dodge, Arnold J. Kemp, Pope.L, Martha Rosler, Slavs and Tatars, and Cecilia Vicuña. Roelstraete was a curator for documenta 14 in 2017. From 2012 to 2015 he served as the Manilow Senior Curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, where he organized The Way of the Shovel: Art as Archaeology (201314), Simon Starling: Metamorphology (2014), The Freedom Principle: Experiments in Art and Music, 1965 to Now (2015), and Kerry James Marshall: Mastry (2016). From 2003 to 2011 Roelstraete worked at M HKA, Antwerp, where he curated exhibitions featuring Chantal Akerman (2012) and Liam Gillick and Lawrence Weiner (2011), as well as survey shows of contemporary art from Rio de Janeiro (A Rua, 201112) and Vancouver (Intertidal: Vancouver Art & Artists, 200506). Other recent curatorial projects include Pope.L: Between a Figure and a Letter at the Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin (2022); Machines à Penser at Fondazione Prada, Venice, devoted to the space of the philosophers hut and organized in conjunction with the Biennale Architettura (2018); and The Other Transatlantic: Kinetic Art and Op Art in Eastern Europe and Latin America, on view at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, Moscow, and Sesc Pinheiros, São Paulo, in 201718. Roelstraete has published extensively on contemporary art and related philosophical issues in numerous art catalogues and journals.
The exhibition will be on view from 18 June 2023 until March 2024 at the George Economou Collection, 80 Kifissias Ave, 15125 Marousi, Athens, Greece. Our opening hours are Monday to Friday from 10 am to 6 pm, and Wednesdays until 8pm.