“No Tomorrow” Exhibition

Here Gallery

poster for “No Tomorrow” Exhibition
[Image: Tony Toscani "Cats Circling Around a Woman" (2017) oil on linen.]

This event has ended.

HERE proudly presents No Tomorrow.

Death is inevitable. Every living thing meets its demise at some point. Different cultural customs have been developed to honor and mourn the dead – some elaborate and ornate, while others somber and contemplative, and even sometimes jubilant and joyous. The artists involved in “No Tomorrow” investigate and embrace the beauty of death as a movement for rebirth, contemplation and facing the infinite stillness.

For her video installation Portals, Katina Bitsicas examines the moment when a social media platform accidentally records someone’s death. Recorded from a first person perspective, each video captures not the demise of the victims, but that moment after all movement has stopped. The eerie stillness of each video gives the viewer a glimpse of sky or perhaps the last view the victims saw before they died. Each video makes the viewer aware of moments between life and death and how fleeting it truly is.

Sean Capone’s video Horizon (suspension) serves as an elegy to his childhood landscape, once the site for family gathering and holidays; the land where his grandparents’ generation settled as immigrants, now serving only as their burial ground. Viewers are given a glimpse of repeating horizontal motion as he navigates his way to mourn the death of his grandfather.

Laura Murray examines the fragility of nature and the life cycle of the cicada. Buried underground for the majority of their lives, cicadas emerge for only a brief few weeks at the end of their life. However due to human expansionism, pesticide usage and climate change they face possible extinction. Embellishing their exoskeletons in a lustrous gold, Murray emphasizes their beauty and the life-to-death journey of these amazing creatures.

For Richard Stauffacher’s installation The Reclaiming, the life cycle is examined as different species of fungus absorb and lay claim over human bones. Fungi perform an essential role in the decomposition of organic matter and have fundamental roles in the ever evolving environment. When one thing perishes, others spring to life.

The paintings of Tony Toscani celebrate the liberation between life and death. His skull figures perform every day tasks – playing in the sand at the beach, gossiping, contemplating ones existence – teetering between love and despair, fear and beauty, and humor and sadness. Each painting blurs the line between life and death and death in life.

After the death of artist Kathleen White in September of 2014, Conrad Ventur was invited to stay in the apartment where she and her partner and collaborator Rafael Sánchez lived. While there Ventur was able to able to capture the intimacy of loss and the artifacts that remain and offer an extended presence.

Borrowing the visual language from classical Dutch still life, Kimberly Witham creates photographs culled from her surroundings – flowers and vegetables from her garden and animals and birds, all road kill, found close to her home. These photographs are her personal meditation of beauty, fecundity, fragility and the inevitable march of time.

Since 1993, the award-winning HERE, Kristin Marting, Artistic Director and Kim Whitener, Producing Director, has been one of New York’s premier arts organizations and a leader in the field of producing and presenting new, hybrid art from a variety of artistic disciplines— media, visual art, installation, theater, dance, music and opera, puppetry, spoken word and performance art. HERE’s work is challenging and alternative and offers audiences the opportunity to feel that they are part of something new and fresh.

In response to the growing number of artists interested in creating work that fully integrates visual and performing art forms, HERE provides visual artists with residencies through HARP, creating more opportunity for interdisciplinary exchange while supporting a wide range of artistic disciplines and encouraging artists to work beyond a single art form. Additionally, HEREart provides emerging and early career visual artists and curators access to a dynamic space within HERE’s active, multi-arts center, with a focus on exhibitions that creatively work within its unique spaces. The program provides some artists with their first show in Manhattan, while for others the challenge of HERE’s specific public setting offers the opportunity to engage with a new audience in a bold new environment. Through HEREart, and notably its 8-10 annual exhibits, HERE is invested in supporting artworks of all media (painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, collage, video).

Media

Schedule

from September 07, 2017 to October 28, 2017

Opening Reception on 2017-09-07 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