Ashley Bickerton "Nocturnes"

Lehmann Maupin (536 W 22nd Street)

poster for Ashley Bickerton "Nocturnes"

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In "Nocturnes", Bickerton’s third solo exhibition at Lehmann Maupin, the artist revisits mankind’s antithetical attraction and repulsion to the grotesque, exotic, and sexual. Whereas previous works depicted abundant worlds of health, happiness, family, and cohesion, Bickerton has become disillusioned with the brilliance and wholesomeness that colored these preceding works, now drawing inspiration from the phrase ‘twisting and flapping in the neon wilderness’. This new body of work, which includes paintings and c-prints, reveals the sordid gutters of paradise; a fractured world illuminated by neon and laden with lost boys, bloated sex tourists, escapist degenerates and opportunists. In select works, this tawdry and bent environment, rich with human longing and broken promise, serves as a playground to Bickerton’s signature blue man, who reappears as an explosive madman on a white-knuckle tear through the world, gluttonously devouring all that is adrenal or sensual. Others frame packs of lost boys running amok amidst a blur of neon bars and go-go clubs, provoking the viewer to question their place in the setting, whether they are fixtures of the back-alley debauchery, or simply mischievous children playing in the streets. In his transition from sunlight to darkness, Bickerton sees one no less alluring or lustrous than the other, offering only an analytic account of the dichotomous world.

From 31 May 2011, a lavishly illustrated career survey of Bickerton’s work will be available, published by Other Criteria, providing an unprecedented insight into the artist’s life and art. Throughout this eclectic monograph, the artist’s own commentary is interwoven with text from additional contributors, including essays by fellow artist Jake Chapman, novelist Nick McDonell, art historian Abigail Solomon-Godeau, curator Dominic Molon, and the artist’s father, the noted linguist-anthropologist Derek Bickerton. Also included is an interview with Bickerton conducted by Hans Ulrich Obrist, co-director of London’s Serpentine Gallery, presented in the form of a comic novel with illustrations by graphic artist Ignacio Noé. This book, designed by Stefan Sagmeister in close collaboration with the artist, is a striking work of art in its own right, featuring a fold-out poster, die-cut pages, and more than 300 colour illustrations. The limited edition is signed, has hand carved pages and is enclosed in a Balinese carved wooden slipcase. It also includes a signed print.

Ashley Bickerton was born in the West Indies in 1959. He studied at the California Institute of the Arts, graduating in 1982, and continued his education in the Whitney Museum Independent Studies Program in New York. He was a founding member of the “Neo-Geo” movement and a seminal figure in the East Village scene in New York.

[Image: Ashley Bickerton "Red Scooter Nocturne" [2010-11] Acrylic, digital print and plastic laminate on wood] 65.5 x 76.75 x 5 in.]

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from May 06, 2011 to June 25, 2011

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