Dzine “Born, Carlos Rolon, 1970”

Paul Kasmin Gallery (515 W 27th)

poster for Dzine “Born, Carlos Rolon, 1970”

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Paul Kasmin Gallery, in collaboration with Salon 94, presents Dzine: Born, Carlos Rolon, 1970, a joint exhibition of new works by Carlos Rolon (Dzine), on view January 29 - March 1, 2014 at 515 West 27th Street, New York. At Paul Kasmin Gallery, Rolon will present a dually charged exploration of boxing and domestic culture, inspired by the tactility and performative qualities of boxing, and its importance in Latin America, specifically in Puerto Rican and Cuban communities. By mining his childhood memories, Rolon invites the viewer to step into intimate scenes such as his family’s wood-paneled basement, decorated with gold garlands and vintage beer placards, where his father would watch prize fights like Roberto Durán V. Sugar Ray Leonard. Rolon monumentalizes his blue-collar trophy den as the setting for his exhibition, creating an homage not only to boxing culture, but also to Puerto Rican immigration to America. Within the exhibition is an installation of paintings and sculptural fabric works exuberant with color, texture, patterns, and experiments in surface that create a visual dialogue between the physical charge of boxing, the garments worn by the fighters, and the artist’s own childhood home and upbringing as a first generation immigrant.

In conjunction with this exhibition, the artist will release BOXED: A Visual History of the Art of Boxing, published by Damiani, Paul Kasmin Gallery, and Salon 94, and distributed by D.A.P International. BOXED is a visual presentation of how the sport of boxing has been a source of inspiration and metaphor for artists, craftsmen and documentarians. For Rolon, BOXED is a love letter to his father, in the vein of his previous publication, NAILED and traveling installation Imperial Nail Salon (an exact reproduction of his childhood living room), which was a tribute to his mother. A selection of artists included in BOXED are Jeff Koons, Glenn Ligon, Yoshitomo Nara, Claes Oldenburg, Ed Paschke, Paul Pfeiffer, Ed Ruscha, Ushio Shinohara, Gary Simmons, Ken Solomon, Sam Taylor-Wood, Jeff Wall, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Andy Warhol, Christopher Wool, Jules De Balincort, Libby Black, Taner Ceylan, Robert Graham, and Keith Haring, with texts by Franklin Sirmans, Terri and Michael Smooke Department Head and Curator of Contemporary Art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and Christopher Bedford, Henry and Lois Foster Director of the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University.

Salon 94 will present a concurrent exhibition at their 243 Bowery, New York location, further addressing the artist’s dual identity, developed as he traveled back and forth from Puerto Rico to the U.S as a child. Throughout his life, the artist bore witness to the ways in which households adapted to new American lifestyles. Of particular importance to the Puerto Rican home was the mirror, which could be strategically positioned to give the illusion of grander, larger spaces. Thus, the prized objects transformed the makeshift homes of cinderblock and corrugated metal, an act of decorative escapism. Rolon channels this approach with large scale, obsessively detailed, mosaic-like crack-pattern paintings outlined with crystals and glitter caulking, expanding on ideas of self-reflection and imagined luxury. Some of the mirror paintings take their patterns from security fences on gates and windows found throughout Puerto Rican neighborhoods, emphasizing the relationship between decoration and protection in the home. A life-sized preserved palm tree adorned with lights is positioned at the center of the gallery. A customized Schwinn bicycle is outfitted with speakers that play traditional salsa, merengue, and folk music. Taken together, these objects account for a loud and remarkable celebration of dual identities, co-mingling and reflecting one another. As in his exhibition at Paul Kasmin Gallery, Rolon ushers in a new body of work that exposes and exalts an archive of everyday aesthetics, and the culture of memory that surrounds them.

Carlos Rolon/Dzine (b. 1970, Chicago Illinois) attended Columbia College, Chicago with a concentration in painting and drawing. Over the past several years, Rolon has been recognized for his elaborately crafted paintings, ornate sculptures and works based on Kustom Kulture. His studio practice comes out of his rich Puerto Rican heritage and upbringing in the US. Situated between conspicuous consumption and urban identity, it is at once melancholic, excessive and exuberant. Rolon is a recipient of the Joan Mitchell Foundation award for Painting and Sculpture. Recent museum exhibitions and projects include the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; The New Museum, New York; the Bass Museum of Art, Miami; Flint Institute of Arts, Michigan; the Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico, San Juan; the Contemporary Art Museum, St.Louis; the Museum Het Domein, Sittard, The Netherlands; The Busan Biennale, Korea; the Ukrainian Pavilion, 52nd Biennale di Venezia, Italy, among others. His work is in many museum and public collections such as the Bass Museum of Art, Miami; the Brooklyn Museum, NY; City of Chicago Public Art Collection, Illinois; Museo del Barrio, New York; Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico, San Juan; Museum Het Domein, Sittard, The Netherlands; Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego; Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City; and the Pinchuk Art Centre, Kiev.

[Image: Carlos Rolon, My Father’s Wishes (No.1, No.2, No.3), 2013. Wallpaper, wood, mirror, 24 kt. gold leaf, quartz crystals, metal, sunglasses and bronzed boxing gloves. (No.1 and No.3) – 50 x 64 inches, (No.2) – 80 x 54 inches. Courtesy of the artist and Paul Kasmin Gallery.]

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Schedule

from January 29, 2014 to March 01, 2014

Opening Reception on 2014-01-29 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Dzine

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