Exhibition at Marianne Boesky Gallery brings together eighteen contemporary artists
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Exhibition at Marianne Boesky Gallery brings together eighteen contemporary artists
Leslie Hewitt, Untitled (On Place), Blue Skies, Warm Sunlight Study, 2012. Digital C-Print, 30 x 40 inches 76.2 x 101.6 cm. Courtesy of the artist and Sikkema Jenkins, New York © Leslie Hewitt. Photo credit: Jason Wyche.



NEW YORK, NY.- Marianne Boesky Gallery is showing The Material Image, an exhibition organized by curator Debra Singer that brings together eighteen contemporary artists whose work reflects renewed engagements with photography through continued exploration of its earliest forms while expanding its traditional limits. The exhibition celebrates the medium’s materials and processes, drawing on historical perspectives that align photography’s fundamentals with formal properties, genres, and conventions more associated with other media such as painting, drawing, sculpture, and film. The artists included are: Michele Abeles, Lucas Blalock, Sam Falls, Ryan Foerster, Amy Granat, Rachel Harrison, Leslie Hewitt, John Houck, Barbara Kasten, Jason Loebs, Nick Mauss, Ken Okiishi, Arthur Ou, Anthony Pearson, Marina Pinsky, Mariah Robertson, Matt Saunders, and Chris Wiley.

The concepts, construction, and manipulation of images on view relate strongly to photography’s material history, while at the same time extending and altering the medium’s conventional boundaries. As these artists make their photographs, rather than take them, many consider process itself to be as significant as the end result. Indeed, their photographic endeavors combine early 20th century Modernist ideas of the constructed image with perspectives related to 1960s Conceptual art, Process art, and Post-Minimalist art traditions, as evidenced in such disparate work as that of Amy Granat, Barbara Kasten, Ken Okiishi, Arthur Ou, and Anthony Pearson.

For some artists in The Material Image, their works are the results of studio-based, photographic experiments that revel in the aspects of photography’s early, camera-less history that favored chemical experimentation and the exploration of gesture, line, and spatial abstraction. These new, process-based works are created through both familiar methods, such as the photogram, to more obscure 19th century techniques such as cliché verre and hybrid techniques of the artists’ own invention, often involving the spirited misuse of light-sensitive chemicals or the creation of unconventional negatives, as seen in the contrasting works of Nick Mauss, Mariah Robertson, and Matt Saunders, among others.

Processes of the darkroom are also extended out-of-doors, as sunlight, rain, and wind serve as alchemical progenitors, creating shadows and contours on deteriorating surfaces. Taking advantage of the inherent instability of chemicals, dyes, papers, and fabrics, these artists embrace chance and accident as they leave their works outside, allowing the natural elements to complete them, as exemplified in various ways in the work, for instance, of Sam Falls, Ryan Foerster, and Jason Loebs.

For others, properties of the medium are further stretched to investigate sculptural forms. In some instances, sculptures are generated from the photographic material itself, while in others the image becomes more akin to an integrated object, inseparable from the framing device or elements around it. For some, sculptural arrangements are the means to an end and exist only through their documentation as a final photograph. These divergent engagements, intermingling sculpture and photography, are alternately demonstrated in the work of Michele Abeles, Rachel Harrison, Leslie Hewitt, Barbara Kasten, and Chris Wiley, among others, as they play with the perceptual intricacies of physical versus intangible space.

Such conversations about the “real” and the artificial, the actual and the virtual, are continued in the work of such artists as Michele Abeles, Lucas Blalock, John Houck, and Marina Pinsky, through an underlying fluid combination of analog photography intermixed with elements of digital manipulation. Utilizing a combination of the camera, the scanner, and computer software to generate their compositions, these artists create multi-layered images that often reflect, rather than obscure, qualities of technical intervention. In this way, the mediation of the image’s creation becomes part.










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