Robin Rhode "Empty Pockets"

Perry Rubenstein Gallery (534 West 24th Street)

This event has ended.

"Empty Pockets" centers its narrative on the game of pool or billiards played outside in the public realm, as is common in neighborhoods in South Africa. Executed within the urban decay of Johannesburg's periphery, Rhode references the Babylonian worldview of a flat earth that stands on pillars; the introduction of a spherical object (the pool balls) interrupts the firmament or horizon. The pool table appears upside down (Rhode has subverted the original photographic image in post production) so that the balls appear to be floating in mid air. The atmosphere repositions the balls within the two-dimensional space. Rhode renders this space in three dimensions through the combination of his painting and the figure enacting the game. The figure is more of a form than a character, functioning as a vector, with the pool table as the axis upon which the action itself is mapped out. Within each frame, art historical sources come to mind – the Vitruvian Man, Mondrian's minimalism — are grounding but ultimately fleeting.

Media

Schedule

from June 25, 2008 to August 10, 2008

Artist(s)

Robin Rhode

  • Facebook

    Reviews

    All content on this site is © their respective owner(s).
    New York Art Beat (2008) - About - Contact - Privacy - Terms of Use