Doug Ischar "Sleepless"

Golden Gallery

poster for Doug Ischar "Sleepless"

This event has ended.

This is Ischar’s third exhibition at Golden Gallery. The first, Marginal Waters, featured a body of photographs from 1985 never before seen in its entirety. Taken on Chicago’s now defunct Belmont Rocks – then one of the most visible urban gay beaches in North America – and during the height of the AIDS crisis – the photographs were presented alongside a new single-channel video work, forget him, serving as counterpoint to the twenty-five year old documents.

Ischar’s second exhibition with the gallery, Honor Among, featured multiple photographs taken during 1987 at a San Francisco leather bar, The Eagle, alongside a 2007 single-channel video, back the way he came, together addressing key themes from Ischar's practice during the past twenty years: pleasure in looking, the position of the spectator, public sexuality, and representations of masculinity. Both photographic series, Marginal Waters and Honor Among, were presented for the first time in their 2009 and 2011 exhibitions.

Sleepless is an exhibition drawn from Ischar’s institutional exhibition history from 1993 - 1995. Two large bodies of work, Orderly and Wake - presented at The List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge; Museo de Arte Moderna, São Paulo; Mercer Union, Toronto; and SITE Santa Fe, among others – emerged at a moment when the exploration of media, and cross-disciplinary practices, were critical actions further complicating the then-peculiar state of semiotics.

The current exhibition presents the opportunity for the artist, and the public, to re-approach selected components from those early 90s installations, nearly two decades from their original conception and exhibition.

Ischar’s editing of moving image and static objects continues to address the practical and visual boundaries for definitions of masculinity, sexuality, violence and secrecy. Sentry, consisting of two surveillance monitors on a wall-mounted shelf, depicts appropriated Hollywood periscope footage alongside a panning fluoroscope scanning a lock box concealing sexual paraphernalia that, per his dying friend’s request, Ischar retrieved.

The hypnagogic image is that which stays with us, often repeating, both dwelling in and constituting the state between wakefulness and sleep. Sleepless is both a state and a mood: here, the exhibition emphasizes the elegance of retrospection and the reminiscence of darkness.

Media

Schedule

from January 05, 2012 to February 12, 2012

Opening Reception on 2012-01-05 from 18:00 to 21:00

Artist(s)

Doug Ischar

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