Ash Ferlito “I Want to Break Free”

Arts + Leisure

This event has ended.

Arts+Leisure presents I Want to Break Free, an installation of new work by Ash Ferlito. The show’s title comes from the Queen song of the same name. It is one of a few songs stuck in her head since the summer, picked up during her DNA residency in Provincetown, MA, where this series began.

I Want to Break Free operates as a kind of affirmation anthem. It’s the mood conveyed in Strawberry, a fruity stained tongue on raw canvas or in Truth, a sculpted yellow, red and black-banded snake. Zipped tongue and slippery snake belie a desire for openness and communication. These works reflect a broad range of influence—Ferlito rummages through popular culture, music and craft traditions—and in combining materials and styles, she accesses new truths and freedoms.

Synthesizing thoughts and feelings with imagery is a way to slow the spinning of wheels. Eva, a brushy black field with disappearing glowing green arches, is a pattern from a dress given to her by an elusive hard crush and an opportunity for Ferlito to reflect on relationship dynamics and the nature of love. Taking patterns and details from fabric and costumes of friends, family, fictional characters and performers, Ferlito develops a new visual language that’s underpinned by personal, yet open, narratives.

Frankenstein is painted leather bearing a geometric tree-like design composed with zippers, a motif that started off on the chest of David Carradine’s character in the science fiction movie Death Race 2000. While in basis the object may allude to a larger message of future, dystopian psychologies and contemporary societal sickness, as viewers, we luxuriate in the scenic and material pleasure of the costume. In other words, everything in I Want to Break Free has a story, but you are free to make up your own.

Media

Schedule

from January 21, 2016 to February 28, 2016

Opening Reception on 2016-01-21 from 19:00 to 22:00

Artist(s)

Ash Ferlito

  • Facebook

    Reviews

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