Wickerham & Lomax “Local Atonement: A Nutshell Study of Unexplained Death”

American Medium

poster for Wickerham & Lomax “Local Atonement: A Nutshell Study of Unexplained Death”

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American Medium presents Local Atonement: A Nutshell Study of Unexplained Death, Wickerham & Lomax’s first solo show in New York in four years. The work will trace some of the key themes in their 2012 Artists Space show, DUOX4Larkin, which concerned the workspace as an articulation of one’s identity and the compulsion to personalize.

“Glessner Lee’s dioramas convey her sense that houses can be false shelters, places carefully furnished to conceal ongoing crimes, lies, suffering, and fury.”

Featured in this exhibition through a series of large-scale digital paintings are works that function in dialogue with the televisual—set design, set dressing, and props—while simultaneously challenging traditions of object presentation: the still life, shadow box, and vanitas. The hierarchy of these objects isn’t placed in their utility but in their ability to assist in manufacturing narrative. In a way it’s similar to contemporary phenomenon of posturing for social media and needing the indicator of an experience more than the actual experience in itself. Their ongoing web-based narrative BOY’Dega: Edited4Syndication (since 2014) presents their character Kimbra, whose parents own an antique store. Characters in the BOY’Dega universe are shells (files) for storing various contemporary phenomenon and articulating them through peripheral means. The antiques as suggested in these works seem to inherit a contagion, making them take on some of the bodily aspects of those who have owned them: an old basketball wears a corset, a head continues life in a Ziploc bag, a severed arm continues drafting a letter of discontent.

“These rooms evoke the incomparable silence of houses whose objects have suddenly and unexpectedly outlived the inhabitants who arranged them.”

The idea of location as character and the insidious aspects of its effects on its occupants lead to notions of escape, the discarded, and identity confusion, all colliding to punish the artists with their own set of iconography. The use of this recurring iconography is a way of running towards obsolescence and rendering these things into antiques. The matters of concealment and distraction are both taken up as forms to depict in a dizzying, yet legible, presentation.

[Quotes from Patricia Storace’s The Shock of the Little]


Wickerham & Lomax is the collaborative name of Baltimore-based artists Daniel Wickerham (b. Columbus, Ohio, 1986) and Malcolm Lomax (b. Abbeville, South Carolina, 1986).

Prior exhibitions and projects include Open Sessions 7 at the Drawing Center, New York, NY (2016); NADA Art Fair, New York, NY (2016); Take Karaoke: A Proposition for Performance Art at Brown University, Providence, RI (2015); Sondheim Prize Finalist Exhibition at Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, MD (2015); BOY’Dega: Edited4Syndication for New Museum’s First Look series (2014); DUOX4Larkin, Artists Space, New York (2012); Break My Body, Hold My Bones, CCS Bard Hessel Museum, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY (2011).

Wickerham & Lomax are the 2015 winners of the Janet and Walter Sondheim Prize.

Media

Schedule

from September 22, 2016 to October 30, 2016

Opening Reception on 2016-09-22 from 19:30
*Drinks and light fare will be served. Please RSVP to info@americanmedium.net by September 20th.

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