Artist Elene Chantladze subject of dual exhibitions at Kaufmann repetto and Anton Kern Gallery in New York
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, December 22, 2024


Artist Elene Chantladze subject of dual exhibitions at Kaufmann repetto and Anton Kern Gallery in New York
Elene Chantladze, Untitled, 2022. Courtesy of kaufmann repetto.



NEW YORK, NY.- Dual exhibitions at kaufmann repetto and Anton Kern Gallery survey the different aspects of Georgian artist Elene Chantladze’s practice. At kaufmann repetto, a span of works that include landscapes, portraiture, and still life exemplify her sensitive registers of mark-making and uses of unconventional materiality. The singular point of view in these drawings and paintings possess a diaristic intimacy while conjuring a rich image-repertoire of shared associations. While at Anton Kern, her different modes of world-building draw on art historical and literary traditions of the pastoral and the folk tale to explore the everyday and the speculative characteristics that buttress her portrayals of people and animals within the landscapes they inhabit. From washes of color to finer renderings evoking mood and atmosphere, these works elaborate narrative potential through figures, relations, and mise-en-scène that are both familiar and fanciful.

Born by the sea in Supsa, Georgia, a town named after the river running by her home, Elene Chantladze gathered stones, wrote stories and plays, kept diaries, and read voraciously from a young age. For much of her life, she has lived in Tskaltubo, where warm radon-carbonate mineral springs coursing under the earth here brought fame to the region in the form of spas popular with the Soviets. While working in the area’s various sanatoriums and diagnostic centers to support her family, she would collect the empty chocolate boxes discarded by doctors, the old calendar pages the nurses gave her, or any thrown-out items with surfaces suitable to make drawings and paintings. As proper paper was expensive and too scarce for her to procure, Chantladze embraced these obscure materials to create visual corollaries for the fables that still contour her imaginary.

Her drawings and paintings inhabit a dual space, grounded in ordinary stuff of everyday life as well as reflecting a highly subjective representation of lived experience. Her approach to image-making is layered, accreted with meaning through both the materials she uses and how she synthesizes personal history, literature, local custom, and global events into her fantastic tableaux. The range of media she employs - from traditional paint and charcoal to more unconventional materials like kerosene and berry juice, as well as natural elements such as stone and man-made detritus including paper plates and plastic lids - not only speaks to the primary relationship of Chantladze’s being in the world, but also to the deep compulsion of the artist to create something from anything. Equally inspired by the surface differentiations on a rock found by the riverbank as in the stains and marks on the discarded scraps on which she draws and paints, her quasi-fairy-tale compositions engage with vertiginous simultaneity, idiosyncratic figuration, and surreal narrativity. In her work, there is a porosity of being, children roam fields of flowers in which their own faces peer back at them, animals approach as friends and hover as protecting spirits over landscapes rife with foliage, lovers can be star-crossed and bridegrooms monstrous. However, any perception of faux-naif sensibility belies a complex reparative impulse for portraying worlds in whose making Chantladze recenters her vision and subject position within a culture that has traditionally allowed for this kind of creative labor and self-taught practice to remain invisible.

Like a folklorist attending to local myth and legends that bind community beliefs or an astrologer scrying the night sky for patterns in the sky congruent to our most human hopes and fears, Chantladze’s work evokes the potential for the otherworldly to elucidate or reimagine the everyday. As Annina Zimmermann writes, “Elene Chantladze is not creating new worlds, but tracing life and arranging it into meaning.” In this tracing and rearranging, she discovers not only a sense of selfhood located within the psycho-aesthetic experience, but remakes a world in which her perspectives—shifting and idiomatic—enliven her surroundings through both wonder and critique.

Elene Chantladze lives and works Tskaltubo, Georgia. She has been the subject of solo exhibitions at Kunsthalle Zurich; M HKA Antwerp; Gallery Nectar, Tbilisi; LC Queisser, Tbilisi; Modern Art, London, and Fierman Gallery, New York. With artist Ser Serpas, she had an exhibition at Conceptual Fine Arts, Milan, and has been included the group exhibitions “girls, girls, girls,” curated by Simone Rocha at Lismore Castle Arts in Lismore Ireland, and more recently with Rooms Studio at M HKA in Antwerp Belgium. A publication The Gift to Irma with essays by Ser Serpas and Miciah Hussey is forthcoming.

—Miciah Hussey

opened february 16th
kaufmann repetto, new york

opening thursday february 22nd, 6-8pm
anton kern gallery, new york










Today's News

February 21, 2024

The Met aims to get Harlem right, the second time around

'Oppenheimer' sweeps the BAFTAs with 7 awards including best film

'Beatrice Caracciolo: The Parable of the Blind' opened at Paula Cooper Gallery on February 17th

"Street Art" power invades Julien's featuring works from Banksy, Invader, RETNA and Jamie Reid

Centenary of the birth of Antoni Tàpies celebrated by Museo Reina Sofía and Fundació Antoni Tapies

Artist Elene Chantladze subject of dual exhibitions at Kaufmann repetto and Anton Kern Gallery in New York

First solo exhibition in the United States dedicated to Swiss artist Verena Loewensberg now at Hauser & Wirth

Benton Museum of Art announces appointment of Solveig Nelson as curator of photography and new media

East Van's gritty 1970's gang era with immersive, subversive world premiere of 'Sunrise Betties'

Vincent van Gogh's 1st painting to depict outdoors and two seminal paintings by Andrew Wyeth at Currier Museum

World Chess Hall of Fame showing 'Donna Dodson: Match of the Matriarchs and other Amazonomachies'

Princeton University Library presents largest U.S. retrospective of the work of Ulises Carrión to date

Can the Olympics rejuvenate one of France's poorest corners?

Quietly dressing Hollywood's cool girls

The twilight of the American sommelier

Song-Word Art House announces 'Echoes Of The Flame' to celebrate music and lyrics of James Brown

100 years of surrealism commemorated by the Belgian Presidency of the Council of the EU at Bozar

National Gallery presents new performance celebrating architecture of Colin Madigan

American Masters Shorts launches with 'Searching for Augusta Savage' in honor of Black History Month

Knoxville Museum of Art receives $3 million contribution to endow executive director position

'Sky Hopinka: Subterranean Ceremonies' is now on view at FRYE Art Museum

Public Art Fund debuts Clifford Prince King's autobiographical photo series, capturing queer black companionship

Emily Sano to retire after four decades as a curator, director and advocate for Asian art

Discover the Magic of Arkfeld Pro: The Dragon Engraving Edition Unveiled

How Hetal Vyas Turned a Simple Idea into a Well-Oiled Machine

Renowned filmmaker Jie Deng and editor Jingting Yang's Collaborative Creation: "Hindi Mama"

Crafting Your Artistic Resume: Tips for Emerging Artists




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
(52 8110667640)

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