Ken Price “Zoo”

Franklin Parrasch Gallery

poster for Ken Price “Zoo”

This event has ended.

A survey exhibition focused exclusively on Price’s ceramic cups and unique works on paper involving the depiction of animals. The show includes examples of some of the artist’s most iconic subject matter, ranging from sea turtles, squid, tree frogs, and Gila Monsters to a host of other amphibious and subterranean characters. This is the first exhibition to illuminate Price’s aesthetic engagement with Animalia. Animals have a starring role in Price’s drawn depictions of an imagined world immersed in endless narrative drama. Some of these animals are depicted in specific detail (e.g. the emblazoned frill of an Australian lizard), while others morph outside the bounds of clear recognition, such as an asexually reproducing organism – perhaps an ancient jellyfish, or an Al Capp shmoo. Sexuality was a pervasive and mysteriously expressed theme in Price’s work throughout his entire career; often these creatures lurk or coil, poised to engage in primal surges. If these animals do convey any pathos, it’s that of survival: deadpan and focused.

Included in this exhibition is the artist’s first snail cup, dating from 1965. Struck by the gesture of a small, store-bought ceramic snail, Price made a palette-shaped cup to which he fused the souvenir, engaging the two seemingly unrelated forms. The gestures of both cup and creature take on similar characteristics of stance and stature. In a 2006 interview with Douglas Dreishpoon, Price recalled, “When I made that series, I was very interested in reptiles and amphibians, and didn’t feel it was unnatural to have lizards or snails on cups. They go together, don’t you think?”

Early in his career, Price embraced drawing as a separate and vital aspect of his creative process; the gestures and forms of his animal subjects clearly relate to the core inclinations of his sculptural work. For Price, drawings of specific creatures served as a means to explore and derive a sense of life and motion that he would then absorb into his sculptural oeuvre. The qualities of shape, contour, color, texture, and interaction with light organically translate from the gestures of his early animals to his later amorphous sculpture. Deriving the vitality of a pre-human history, Price’s images – representative and abstract alike – are reflections of a subliminal world.

[Image: Ken Price “Egging Double Frog Cup” (1971) ink and acrylic on paper 15.5 x 12.5 in. framed]

Media

Schedule

from May 07, 2013 to August 02, 2013

Artist(s)

Ken Price

  • Facebook

    Reviews

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