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Fables, a Group Show of Artists at Philadelphia's ICA |
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Kanishka Raja, The Dissolution of the Prepublic (Version 2), 2005. Oil paint, mixed media on canvas over 5 wooden panels. 80 x 176 inches overall. Courtesy of envoy, New York.
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PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania presents the exhibit Fables through December 17, 2006. The Institute of Contemporary Art is pleased to present "Fables," a group show of artists who have either fabricated personal histories, or reconsidered history through their own fanciful imaginings, in order to break free of the very conditions of historic and cultural narrative.
This exhibition brings together works that project particular social subjectsthe artist, the immigrant, the person of colorin narratives shaped by conceptual practices. The urge to tell a story merges with the desire to dismantle one in works that represent a range of media. For example, Kara Walker's silhouettes portray psycho-sexual fantasies about antebellum America and Bronx-based Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz's drawings explore her Puerto Rican heritage through pop-cultural heroes.
"Fables" will include established and emerging artists of color living and working in the United States. Their practices encompass a variety of media who are operating within a conceptual art framework. Artists include: Kara Walker (b. 1969, Stockton, CA) who revived the 19th century silhouette cutout tradition to explore race and sexuality; Kanishka Raja (b. 1969, Kolkata, India), whose drawings and paintings of architectural interiors combine complex styles and complicated perspectival lines; Wanda Raimundi-Ortiz (b. 1973, lives and works in the Bronx) whose works focus on her Puerto Rican heritage and the place of Latinas in North American society; and Christopher Myers (b. 1974, New York City) whose works on 19th-century circus and fair "freaks" explore the construction of mythical identities through public display.
Whether by invoking social history or deploying science (witness the current commercial surge in genealogical DNA testing), people have a desire to create a narrative that accounts for their past and perhaps sheds light on their present. "Fables" exemplifies how some artists work through that desire while underscoring prominent trends in contemporary thought not exclusively recent art: the critical use of narrative, the role of fantasy, the creation of fictitious personae, and engagement with a "post-identity" politics in conceptual art practice.
This exhibition is organized by Naomi Beckwith, the 2005-06 ICA Whitney Lauder Curatorial Fellow. The exhibition will be accompanied by a brochure publication with a text by the curator.
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