Jessica Stockholder “The Guests All Crowded Into the Dining Room”

Mitchell-Innes & Nash (534 W 26th St.)

poster for Jessica Stockholder “The Guests All Crowded Into the Dining Room”

This event has ended.

Mustard on the foot
lid flecking
hug cracked spill,

as sentinels peer over
rose glass - blurred edge
site sight reflected.

Syntax smears rising
center caves void colon and
semi colon cries.

Tied in the picture
bound flying scatter shot out.
Smash in caked crease.


Mitchell-Innes & Nash presents Jessica Stockholder: The Guests All Crowded Into the Dining Room. This will be the gallery’s third solo exhibition with the artist.

The Guests All Crowded Into the Dining Room will feature works from several facets of Stockholder’s practice, including a large-scale site-responsive installation in addition to distinct bodies of studio works.

The studio-based works are made from both purchased and found materials, all of which are designed and manufactured by other people — furniture, plastic goods, fabrics, hardware, paint, paper. The line between a ‘raw’ material and ‘found’ object is blurry, and the intended-life of these objects is discarded but not forgotten. For example, a square of plastic floor and an orange rope are repurposed as formal, painterly elements, and yet their origins are clearly legible. The history and intended-use of these objects confront the viewer as Stockholder deftly engages the power of synergy, combining other people’s thoughts and objects into a form distinctly her own.

Many of the works on view relate to Stockholder’s ongoing series Assists, sculptures which must attach to something other than themselves – a bed, the wall, furniture, other sculpture, or appliances. Each Assist is made up of four parts: two base parts and two top parts. The bases and tops are interchangable. The Assists have a symbiotic relationship with everything around them. With the Assists, Stockholder continues to explore the questions of boundary, dependence, and response to the landscape of human-made things, notions which have been central to her practice to-date.

Stockholder says, “When I make something myself I have control over all of the details and can explore my thought process spontaneously as I go. When I hire someone to make something for me […] I utilize the systems embedded in other trades, people’s thinking and production methods. And in all cases when the work is exhibited it is dependent on the exhibition context, which is replete with all kinds of meaning.”

While the show consists of many different materials and forms, each work is accepted as a coherent, composed whole. Stockholder prods at the gaps between nature and human-made objects, between authorship and anonymity, between art, manufacturing and craft. The result is a destabilizing dynamism that threatens to pull the center out past its edges.

About Jessica Stockholder
Jessica Stockholder’s work has played a crucial role in expanding the dialogue between sculpture and painting and their relationship to form and space. Her recent institutional exhibitions have included Rose’s Inclination at the Smart Museum, Chicago; Paint Things: Beyond the Stretcher at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum in Lincoln, Massachusetts; Peer Out to See at the Palacio de Cristal of the Reina Sofia Museum, Madrid; Hollow Places Court in Ash-Tree Wood at the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Connecticut; and at the Musée d’art moderne, Saint-Etienne Métropole. She has sited major public installations, which include Projects Los Altos at SF MOMA in Los Altos, California; Flooded Chambers Maid in Madison Square Park, New York; and Color Jam in Houston and Chicago’s Loop district. She is the recent recipient of The Academy of Arts and Letters 2014 Awards in Art and was the focus of the career survey exhibition Jessica Stockholder: Kissing the Wall: Works, 1988-2003 at the Blaffer Art Gallery, University of Houston, Texas and the Weatherspoon Art Gallery, University of North Carolina, Greensboro. She has had solo shows at the Dia Center for the Arts and P.S. 1, New York; The Renaissance Society, Chicago; the Power Plant, Toronto; and K20 Kunstsammlung, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf. She has been featured in important group exhibitions including SITE Santa Fe and The Whitney Biennial. Stockholder has been serving as the Chair of the Department of Visual Arts at the University of Chicago since 2011.

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Schedule

from August 25, 2016 to October 01, 2016

Opening Reception on 2016-09-15 from 18:00 to 20:00

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