"Morphological Mutiny" Exhibition

David Nolan Gallery

poster for "Morphological Mutiny" Exhibition

This event has ended.

Morphological Mutiny is an exhibition of recent paintings and works on paper by three New York artists: Steve DiBenedetto, Alexander Ross and James Siena.

In the project poom, we will feature a new installation by Romanian artist, Ciprian Muresan, entitled Incorrigible Believers.

DiBenedetto, Ross and Siena are inventors of hyperreal spaces whose laws are governed by specific internal logic systems. What ties the work together is the surprising pleasure each artist takes in breaking down self-imposed parameters. As acts of morphological mutiny, or rebellion of form and structure, the worksʼ growth and decay explain the life cycle of worlds run by digits, measurements and technology. If the works were placed along a barometer measuring structural integrity, James Siena and Steve DiBenedetto would occupy opposite extremes, with Ross's concerns formally and conceptually balanced between the two.

James Siena employs the mathematical laws of algorithms to predetermine the shape, color, and placement of his forms, which he calls "image-structures." His tight moves feel like Escher tessellations, but have recently found release in figurative experimentation as seen in the outline of a woman in Flat Red Girl, or the suggestion of a face in Decaying Old Man.

Alexander Ross creates green-blue otherworldly spaces informed by microbiology. The alien occupants and monstrous blobs in his works are figures inspired by observations that he makes through the lens of a microscope. Ross short-circuits his biology-based systems by distorting and enhancing that which he sees—sometimes translating his observations into clay macquettes which he will photograph, manipulate on Photoshop, and print out to use as a collage elements for his works on paper.

Steve DiBenedetto resists adherence to a single system of looking or creating. Instead, his subjects, taken from the journals of philosophers and inventors and architects, are his control. The Octopus, The Helicopter and The Glass Tower emerge and evaporate in each work, their physical and psychological engagement denoted by their location within the composition. In this recent work, The Glass Tower has absorbed the octopus before self-imploding. DiBenedettoʼs mutiny is in his treatment of his subjects, which he renders in an unruly painterly technique that is on a constant quest to push the boundaries of what is considered painting to its utmost extremes.

Ciprian Muresan recontextualizes and deconstructs the works of well known literary and art historical figures. Working conceptually in all media, Muresan has appropriated works by Yves Klein, Eugène Ionesco, and Andrei Tarkovsky. For the gallery's project room, Muresan will present a new sculptural installation entitled Incorrigible Believers, consisting of miniature wooden church pews made for children, leading up to the display of Muresan's written ending to Franz Kafka's unfinished 1926 novel, "The Castle." Muresan reinterprets the meanings of the original text, and brings up questions regarding ideology and the formation of collective and individual identity.

James Siena (b. 1957, California) received his BFA from Cornell University in 1979. Sienaʼs work has been featured in of over 55 group exhibitions, including the 2004 Whitney Museum of American Art Biennial.

Alexander Ross (b. 1960, Colorado) earned his B.F.A. from Massachusetts College of Art in 1983.

Steve DiBenedetto (b. 1958, New York City) earned his bachelors degree from the Parsons School of Design in 1980.

Ciprian Muresan (b. 1977, Dej, Romania) graduated from the Academy of Fine Arts, Cluj-Napoca in 2000. He was recently included in the exhibition, The Generational: Younger Than Jesus at the New Museum in New York (2009).

[Image: Steve DiBenedetto "Feedback" (2009) oil on canvas 60 x 48 in.]

Media

Schedule

from December 10, 2009 to January 23, 2010

Opening Reception on 2009-12-10 from 18:00 to 20:00

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