“Figure 8” Exhibition

Clifton Benevento

poster for “Figure 8” Exhibition

This event has ended.

Clifton Benevento presents the group exhibition Figure 8, featuring eight works by eight artists that address materiality and its transformation of information and language.

Language is a code for thought. Score is a code for music. Mathematics is a code for logic.

Developed by Channa Horwitz (1932 – 2013) as a way to organize visually elaborate compositions, Sonakinatography is a code for time, rhythm and movement. Notational systems of numbers ranging from 1 through 8 express and translate unique arrangements while establishing their own visual language on 8-to-the inch graph paper. An alphanumeric logic informs the paintings of Mariah Dekkenga (*1978) in which numbers and letters mark shapes and colors in compositions created in Adobe Illustrator. The digital compositions are transferred by hand onto the canvas, fusing computerized color scales and painterly gesture. Mike Yaniro’s (*1980) Expanded PVC text panels encode information from Material Safety Data Sheets, primarily physical data relating to the material itself, into abstract language. Hand-cut, hand-painted numbers and letters form an illegible grid of codes, and although self-referential, they have the appearance of commercial signage reticent to communicate.

For the video work BOOM (Fresher Acconci), Siebren Versteeg (*1971) developed an algorithm that generates a live stream of random Google image searches which are continuously aggregated into a video vignette. A constant varying sequence of images reflect the Internet’s shifting topography of information. Joshua Citarella’s (*1987) site-specific color gradients are generated through position-dependent color variables in Photoshop. The colors are mapped according to the gradient’s dimensions, assigning each color a unique coordinate within the physicality of the architecture. In Wall Piece, Karin Sander (*1957) reconfigures a section of the gallery’s wall through a subtraction of itself. A white wall transitions into the foreground through its deconstruction as it’s polished in a square format, reflecting the viewer, the space and its own materiality.

Zarouhie Abdalian’s (*1982) sculpture Every Instance (C#/D♭), 2014, comes from a series of piano key groupings. Representing a different pitch class (A-G), each work combines keys from the same piano. Silence becomes palpable as it transitions from a state of sound to a state of stillness and becomes mere object. Disuse gives way to silence in Luis Miguel Bendaña’s (*1988) work that combines VHS tape and custom machine-knit polyester. No longer prized for its ability to deliver content, VHS tape marks the decline of physical and analog film. Entwined within Bendaña’s knitted fabrics, the material lends a muted elegance to his assemblages.

Media

Schedule

from June 26, 2015 to August 07, 2015

Opening Reception on 2015-06-25 from 17:00 to 19:00

  • Facebook

    Reviews

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