NEW YORK, NY.- Gladstone Gallery announces See sun, and think shadow, a group exhibition organized by Simone Battisti. Featuring twelve artists working across varied media, this show will explore the formal tool of antithesis as it is manifest in works that run the gamut from video and installation, to painting and photography. The artists included in the exhibition are: Lucas Blalock, Liz Deschenes, Jessica Dickinson, Trisha Donnelly, Apostolos Georgiou, Hilary Lloyd, Shahryar Nashat, Blake Rayne, Nora Schultz, Amy Sillman, Diane Simpson, and Michael E. Smith.
Borrowing its title from Louis Zukofskys short poem, anew #21, the exhibition will use the binary of light/dark not as a thematic end goal, but rather as an allegorical springboard into broader dichotomies that emerge as a result of examining compositional contrariety, such as hope and despair, familiar and foreign, human and mechanical, and real and representational.
The works on view provide visual rejoinders to this investigation. Lucas Blalocks highly constructed photographs obliterate distinctions between documentary and artifice through the artists use of filmic and digital photographic techniques. Apostolos Georgious canvas, Untitled (2013), a composition in which narrative is just barely evident, utilizes figuration as an endeavor to upset the coherence of the picture plane. Hilary Lloyds video, Sailor (2010), through its presentation of the title subject in sequential images, straddles the line between prosaic observation and overt voyeurism. Shahryar Nashats installation, Present Sore (2016) commissioned by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and co-produced with Portikus, Frankfurt am Main shows the body as a system of ready-at-hand tools in a format that mimics iPhone displays, thereby breaking down the boundaries between human and machine. Nora Schultzs oversized Venetian blinds, while functional, negate their purpose without a light source to block. Amy Sillmans animation, Triscuits (2011-2012), employs allusions to Bernie Bostons Flower Power, Yiddish aphorism, and Soviet-era poetry as means to drive her ghostly characters through cyclical moments of expulsion and insertion. And Diane Simpsons sculpture, an earth-toned tunic produced in rigid rectilinear form, renders utility null.
By interrogating opposites, the featured works elucidate the differences between two poles, and, in the same breath, obscure any distinctions between two seemingly incongruous parts. However, this notion of incompatibility is not a paradox. Rather, it is a tool by which to interrogate uncertainty itself: How is duality ascertained? What is gained by establishing oppositional discourses? Do elements automatically reveal their own inverse?