Dustin Hodges “Late Stick Style”

Miguel Abreu Gallery

poster for Dustin Hodges “Late Stick Style”

This event has ended.

Miguel Abreu Gallery presents Dustin Hodges’s Late Stick Style, his first solo exhibition and first show at the gallery.

The title of the show refers to a fictional “late” moment of a 19th century tendency in American wood architecture. Vincent Scully’s The Shingle Style and The Stick Style chronicles the theory and building of a semi-authorless vernacular, dominated by theorists and pattern books for domestic builders. The Stick Style designates a loose agglomeration of ideas, values, tendencies—a program developed in opposition to the circulation of historical styles and motifs, in contradistinction to architecture as icon and image. This proto-modernist aesthetic program prescribed “expression of structure” as its guiding principle. Striking patterns created by the repetition of vertical, horizontal, and diagonal elements on the outside of the building allude to the organization of the interior and its frame, making Stick Style an important precursor to the drive towards transparency in 20th century Modernist design.

A particularly baroque example of the Stick tendency built about twenty years after the style’s period of real innovation provides the schema for a series of drawings that mediate between photographic documentation of the “Bassett House” in New Haven, the grid of axonometric projection, and the tools and materials of drawing.

The formal geometries and wooden construction of Stick Style architecture are also echoed in a series of works on panel. A 1954 painting by Dieter Roth from his early Concretist period provides a template for the inscription of wood panels constructed in the style of outhouse doors, made of knotty slats and planks labeled “common boards” at Home Depot. This obstinately particularist material confronts the generic in the disciplinary process of “gesso” before being mapped by fragments of Concretist grid.

Further reference to architecture will be on display in the form of a kiosk Hodges constructed, the outside walls of which are made of freehand observational paintings of houseplants on canvas. On view will also be a series of “Ruler Drawings,” following the logic and precision of architectural drawings, as well as a series of “Oyster Style Drawings” that are calligraphic and expressive in nature. Shells, pipes, and teapots appear in the form of loose, gestural marks, while “oyster style” implies the fluid presence of the body or hand, and opens the possibility of narrative. The opposition between the two modes elucidates the contradiction between rationalism and expressionism in modernism, and produces the basic tension in the exhibition and in Hodges’s work to date.

Dustin Hodges received his M.F.A. from the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College in 2012. He also received a B.A. from Harvard University (2006) and attended the Staatliche Hochschule für Bildende Künste Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main (2007).

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Schedule

from January 12, 2014 to February 23, 2014

Opening Reception on 2014-01-12 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Dustin Hodges

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