"Micro/Macro: Culling the Flux of Contemporary Life" Exhibition

Cuchifritos

poster for "Micro/Macro: Culling the Flux of Contemporary Life" Exhibition

This event has ended.

Modernity is the transient, the fleeting, the contingent;
it is one half of art, the other being the eternal and the immovable.
-Charles Baudelaire, The Painter of Modern Life (1859)

The Contemporary is a moment pulled from the flux; a flash of time somehow unaware of the relentless shifting of communities, buildings that rise and fall, storefronts that change and adapt, and landscape that readjusts to a changing climate. In this exhibition, three artists – Jessie Henson, Kate MacDonnell and Christy Speakman – explore the notion of contemporary flux. Henson collects, MacDonnell maps, and Speakman records. From these processes, all three artists produce a most stunning analogy – they transform documents of contemporary instability into the most eternal element of all: the cosmos.

Jessie Henson is a collector. She has always taken pleasure in cheap treasures found in thrift stores and flea markets. In her sculpture, Henson transforms these ephemeral objects – sequins, marbles – into grand and shimmering galaxies. She creates a unique environment for each work, building from the aesthetic of her material. For this exhibition, Henson will focus on these tiny things, transforming them into a fantastic universe.

Kate MacDonnell’s work concentrates on interactions in urban communities. She uses her camera to document the changes and ex-changes of neighborhoods from Washington DC to the Lower East Side. To her, a city is a hub of human interconnectedness – yet perversions of perspective often lead to strained or imbalanced relationships. MacDonnell distorts seemly straightforward human interaction by playing with perspective and scale. While her pictures are mostly based in terrene reality, strategic explosions of light and gaping holes of darkness betrays their visual mimicry of the cosmos.

Christy Speakman has spent years filming and photographing oil leaks from passing vehicles in the New York City. The oil stains appear in her work like the swirls of galaxies and the swooping of comets. For the project at Cuchifritos, Speakman has introduced bubbles of actual landscape, a Louisiana swamp, allowing the viewer both a god’s-eye perspective of deep space and a human sense of scale and grounding.

Henson, MacDonnell and Speakman all share an affinity for the transience, grit, and brutality of contemporary life. Likewise, each artist is able to find the eternal within its tiniest puddles and corners. And that balance, according to Charles Baudelaire, is the definition of art itself.

[Image: Kate MacDonnell "gamma burst appoximation" (2011) archival inkjet print, 19×13 in.]

Media

Schedule

from March 16, 2013 to April 14, 2013

Opening Reception on 2013-03-17 from 15:00 to 17:30

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