Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster “Euqinimod & Costumes”

303 Gallery (507 W 24th St.)

poster for Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster “Euqinimod & Costumes”

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For her first exhibition at 303 and in a New York gallery, Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster will present a new typology of works by revealing an unusual part of her personal archives from the mid-sixties until now, both intimate and social, both fetishistic and symptomatic: her personal clothing and textiles.

While walking through the exhibition “Club to Catwalk: London Fashion in the 1980s” at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London, Gonzalez-Foerster had an epiphany that the inflatable Michiko Koshino coat with a movable tail she used to wear belonged to the museum collection and that the exhibited Michiko Koshino coat actually belonged to her wardrobe. Through this revelation a conversation followed, not about fashion, trends, brands, lifestyles, but on clothes and textiles in a larger sense as possible autobiographical evidences and as the symptoms of Gonzalez-Foerster’s artistic personality through different periods. Corresponding to different aspects of her practice and to an exhibition itself as far as textiles and clothing could be considered as ready-mades and narratives, Dominique’s wardrobe constitutes a new field of exploration into the biographical self.

Gonzalez-Foerster’s work has a history of a strong and vivid relation to textiles and clothing considered not only as materials and surfaces but also as objects of meditation and reverie. Textiles have been present in different forms, like carpets combined with books in her various “tapis de lecture”, and in different forms as well, such as in “Nos années 70” under the form of an Indian fabric bringing back her mother’s room in the seventies, or in “RWF”, staging Rainer Werner Fassbinder’s room with a brown velvet spread covering the filmmaker’s bed. In 2012, Gonzalez-Foerster began work on the the ongoing opera project “M.2062”, connecting her research with 19th century issues and the Gesamtskunstwerk, appearing in costume as characters including King Ludwig II, Scarlett O’Hara and Edgar Allan Poe. Clothes evolve from being canvases for moods, attitudes and psychological moments similar to rooms, spaces and dioramas; they turn into apparitions as characters become costumes. By twisted extension, this logic is taken to a new conclusion: Gonzalez-Foerster’s clothes appear as costumes, narratives and fictions which mirror a fragmented and multiple inner self.

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Schedule

from April 17, 2014 to May 31, 2014

Opening Reception on 2014-04-17 from 18:00 to 20:00

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