Downbeat: Denniston Hill at Marian Goodman Gallery opens today

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Wednesday, July 3, 2024


Downbeat: Denniston Hill at Marian Goodman Gallery opens today
Downbeat: Denniston Hill at Marian Goodman Gallery, Curated by Guillermo Rodríguez. 11 July – 18 August 2023, Photo credit: Sojourner Truth Parsons.



NEW YORK, NY.- Marian Goodman Gallery is opening Downbeat, an exhibition about Denniston Hill, the artist residency founded by artists Julie Mehretu and Paul Pfeiffer and architect Lawrence Chua. Downbeat features alumni and collaborators of Denniston Hill’s residency program, including Rosa Barba, Pelenakeke Brown, Renee Gladman, Autumn Knight, Zoe Leonard, Joseph Liatela, Emma McNally, Maia Cruz Palileo, Sojourner Truth Parsons, Carlos Reyes, and Apichatpong Weerasethakul.

The exhibition takes its title from Denniston Hill’s concept of the “downbeat”: a rhythmic kind of time stretched out to make space for rest, reflection, research, and rejuvenation—essential components of the creative process. Artists exist under a constant pressure to produce. Artist studios are expected to operate like factories, many without the benefit of staff or distribution systems. The Denniston Hill “downbeat” is a counterbalance to this energy. It recognizes artists as whole human beings and nourishes all aspects of artistic production.

Downbeat brings together artworks that resonate with this particular temporality and demands for artist care by addressing alternative modes of being and perception, slowing down the perceived passage of time to intensify experience.

Three large-scale installations by Autumn Knight, Joseph Liatela, and Carlos Reyes offer a physical experience of the pendulum that swings between rest, pleasure, and labor. Liatela’s Heaven’s Gate (2021) holds us in a liminal emotional state. While standing inside the work’s immersive room of blissful sounds and scents, we see through its PVC “walls” to another, harsher reality: the world we just left. Knight’s Lottery Tickets (2022) tasks viewers with scratching the surface of a series of drawings to reveal the compositions hidden underneath. In a reversal of roles, a normally passive audience suddenly takes on the “work” of mark making so that the artist might be allowed to rest. Reyes’ 7129619 (1) (2018) drapes an awning from a defunct men’s bath house across the floor. No longer a shelter from the sun or an enticement for entry, the awning becomes a timekeeper. It simultaneously transports our fantasies to the glory days of this bath house, while its wornness reminds us that we are all proceeding forward towards our own eventual mortality.

The agency of being on one’s own time is an essential aspect of the downbeat. Pelenakeke Brown’s 'Crossings' (2018) series simultaneously untethers and reunites language into new cosmologic patterns to explore “crip time”: a term the artist uses to describe a pace liberated from a Capitalist, able-bodied clock. Renee Gladman’s Slowly We Have the Feeling: Scores (2019 - 2022) presents words and equations as vibrational partners dancing with one another on paper. By musically accentuating the rhythmic components of drawing and writing, Gladman’s scores generate a space/time relationship that relies on interpretation and sensation. Emma McNally’s Sisters (2022) series evokes the always emerging time of quantum physics. McNally, like Gladman, is particularly interested in the vibrational qualities that bond elements together. Her artist statement quotes Karen Barad’s theories on the entangled nature of existence and infers a familial relationship between space and time. Rosa Barba’s Color Studies (2013) is a filmic meditation on color, time, and perception. In it, two 16mm projectors face each other and share a single screen between them anchored by a music stand. Their overlapping images thus become a musical score, as a chromatic rhythm emerges from the combination of colors like notation sheets.




Through works by Zoe Leonard, Maia Cruz Palileo, Sojourner Truth Parsons, Carlos Reyes, and Apichatpong Weerasethakul, we understand how the downbeat is a rhythm more closely aligned with the ebbs and flows of the natural environment. The intentional slowing of time allows a stripping back of the bureaucratic layers that keep us separated from our most organic selves. Parsons’ paintings are coded compositions that suggest multiple modes of beingness in the world. Leonard’s four gelatin silver prints of birds flying above rooftops in Brooklyn propose a listening to the environment that is “relaxed, but not passive.” More actively, Palileo’s paintings and sculpture intentionally scramble the historical “accuracy” of the relationship between time, people, and nature in order to liberate visual artifacts from the “exploitative gaze of the ethnographic image.” Reyes’ Night Club (2016), is a series of hand-blown glass sculptures rhythmically encapsulating the artist’s breathing patterns. In Weerasethakul’s short film, Vapour (2015), a mysterious cloud—the breath of a landscape—completely engulfs a mountain village in Northern Thailand for one day. The resulting melee is a metaphor for the dangerous ways that inharmonious ecosystems can swallow each other.

The exhibition welcomes viewers into a gathering space akin to Denniston Hill’s campus, where a multi-voiced chorus of artists is held together by an atmospheric ethos of “creleizure,” as Hélio Oiticica termed “creative leisure time.” By syncopating socially conditioned notions of time with the more fluid and individualized (or entangled) pace required by creativity, the works presented share notions of rest and deceleration as essential components of artmaking.

Downbeat is curated by Guillermo Rodríguez, a 2022 Curatorial Research Fellow at Independent Curators International (ICI). Rodríguez’s fellowship centered on research for El Contrato Natural, an exhibition-as-ecosystem contrasting the University of Puerto Rico's botanical gardens with artworks that operate in symbiosis with the natural environment that hosts them.

Denniston Hill

Denniston Hill is a residency for artists and creative visionaries nestled inside 220 acres of land traditionally tended by the Esopus people of the Lenapehoking, now known as the southern Catskill mountains in Sullivan County, New York. Since 2004, our residencies have provided free room and board, private studios, a shared wood shop, a community garden, connections to local artists and farmers, and tools for communal living to over 200 artists from around the world. We pay residents a small stipend to help cover the costs of everyday life, and we cover roundtrip travel to our campus. Most importantly, Denniston Hill provides a sanctuary where artists can reconnect with nature, commune with each other, breathe deeply, and just BE.

Denniston Hill at Marian Goodman Gallery, curated by Guillermo Rodríguez
DOWNBEAT
July 13th, 2023 - August 18th, 2023
Opening reception: Thursday, 13 July 2023, 6-8 pm










Today's News

July 13, 2023

After a year of climate protests, the toll rises for museums and activists

Dallas Museum of Art presents initial design concepts from shortlisted firms

Exhibition presents previously unpublished work dating from 1957-1977 by Bruce Davidson

Bonhams announces 32% growth in 2023

HART versus Hermitage Amsterdam

Ellen Hovde, 'Grey Gardens' documentarian, dies at 97

The ups and downs of Europe's most interesting opera festival

Auction features items from 'Citizen Kane,' 'The Sound of Music,' Disneyland and throughout Hollywood history

Tolarno Galleries opens an exhibition of works by Tim Maguire

Weiss Auctions announces highlights included in online-only estate auction

ROKBOX represents needle-moving innovation in the art world

Downbeat: Denniston Hill at Marian Goodman Gallery opens today

'People of the Otherworld: Ken Kiff in Dialogue' opens at albertz benda

Award-winning 'Cabaret' revival plans spring Broadway bow

A Pokémon Ruby Version graded 10.0 A++ leads Heritage's July Video Games event

In Scotland, taking the traditional and making it new

Gorgeous Chinese blue and white porcelain vase blasts through its $100-$300 to sell for $20,910

Art Gallery of Ontario presents three contemporary artists re-imagining African studio portraiture

Book launch and exhibition of paintings by artist and poet, A Painter and a Poet: Conversations in Colour

'A girl for the living room' by Rene Matić to open at the Martin Parr Foundation, Bristol

$100,000 Hadley's Art Prize winner to be announced on July 21st, 2023

Melting glaciers and icebergs depicted by Myrtha Vega at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Atlanta

'Arghavan Khosravi: Black Rain' to be exhibited at the Rose Art Museum this August

Gotta save the castle? Start a podcast.

Elder Care Home Interiors: Creating a Comfortable and Supportive Environment

The Importance of Dental SEO for Patient Growth

The Importance of VPNs in Today's Digital World

The Ever-Evolving Dance of Art and AI: A Perspective from a Historical Artist and Photographer

Reasons to Hire a Car Accident Lawyer for Personal Injury Claims

Artificial Diamond Jewellery: A Practical Choice for Travelers

Top 5 Garage Door Opener Brands for Replacement: Recommendations for Brooklyn Residents

Everything You Need to Know About Watching DramaFever Online

The Rise of Bioskopkeren: Exploring the Popularity and Impact of Online Movie Platforms

What Happens If You Do Not Honor The Terms of The Contract?

A Comprehensive Guide To Parking Lot Lights: Comparing Efficiency, Durability, And Performance

The Top Five Places to Visit in Jerusalem

How Web3 is Disrupting the Music Industry

How Street Art Can Transform Cities and Communities

Interview with Maicol Ferrini: A Innova3ve Ar3st




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