"Here We Aren’t, So Quickly" Exhibition

Thierry Goldberg

poster for "Here We Aren’t, So Quickly" Exhibition

This event has ended.

The gallery presents "Here We Aren’t So Quickly," a three-person exhibition with paintings by Guy Ben-Ari, Krisjanis Kaktins-Gorsline, and Hiroyuki Nakamura. The title of the show, taken from a Jonathan Safran Foer story, points to questions of authenticity and subjectivity explored in the work of all three artists. Whether through figuration or abstraction, each artist plays with the limits of representation in an attempt to knock up against something more real, and perhaps more permanent.

While the work of Krisjanis Kaktins-Gorsline often depicts figurative forms, many of his subjects seem dislocated or pulled apart by abstraction. While something of the recognizable remains, be it hands, hair, or shoes, the figure is never complete, and seems to be disintegrating into drapery, splashes of color, shape and line. These dark, humorous, dynamic paintings lend themselves to continual re-examination, where the image at once alludes to something more than itself, only to revert back to flat applications of mere paint. The figure is complicated by a myriad of implications, at once invoked and erased, as much mutilated as it is liberated. A feeling of absence and emptiness resounds against the recognizable, with subjects on the verge of departure, leaving a flurry of paint and abstracted silhouettes in their wake.

In the work of Hiroyuki Nakamura, the iconic images of the American West are distorted and re-presented on the peculiar dreamscapes of his canvases. With his tiny brushwork and obsessive detail, Nakamura conjures vivid caricatures of cowboys, farmers and rodeos. The paintings depict scenes whose elements are arranged almost like a stage set or a tableau. Delving into the fantastically subjective, into a strange, hilarious, whacky world inhabited by grotesque figures and charged objects, all of which seem to piece together a story, but one whose parts don’t quite fit together; open-ended like an unfinished puzzle.

Not unlike Nakamura, the role that images play in relation to subjectivity is a prevalent theme in the work of Guy Ben-Ari. With the immediacy and deceiving simplicity his comic-book style provides, his paintings are constituted by other paintings. In this sense the work is reminiscent of the painting Galerie de Vues de la Rome Moderne by Giovanni Paolo Panini, and yet here the images depict a myriad of other images, not for the purpose of conveying the historical, but so as to inform the interior world of the individual. The very act of viewing comes into focus, so that the onlooker regards him or herself under the pretext of, or in the context of, looking at art. As a result painting becomes less of an escape into another world, and more a hall of mirrors, where the act of perception is self-perpetuating, perhaps solipsistic. This may again seem claustrophobic, but what it ultimately suggests is that if images are rampant and never-ending in terms of their reiteration, then they are continually there to be reinterpreted, recreated. While such multiplicity may seem to endanger a sense of certainty, it also allows for the free-play of the imagination.

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Schedule

from July 15, 2010 to September 03, 2010

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