Whitney Claflin "As Long As You Get To Be Somebody’s Slave, Too"

Thomas Erben Gallery

poster for Whitney Claflin "As Long As You Get To Be Somebody’s Slave, Too"

This event has ended.

Thomas Erben presents the first solo exhibition at the gallery of new work by Whitney Claflin.

On display are paintings of various sizes on linen, canvas, scarves, glass bottles, laundry bags and dresses, which examine physical and mental states, as well as symptoms, of instability and oversaturation. Working between the excesses and deficiencies of painting's signification, Claflin’s paintings, when taken together, imply a solid, but also dismembered body. This “body” is further shattered and reconstituted when considered alongside Claflin’s performances and painted glass bottles, which function sometimes as flower vases, or in this instance as candleholders.

Lines and mark-making within the works appear dissonant and of various hands: sometimes paint is poured, other times transferred or obscured by fabric. Structural and ornamental motivations become confused when tropes of hysterical insistence (such as sewing a piece of glass onto canvas) are presented alongside an earring precariously placed into a wily, abortive looking piece of found wire. Red herrings emerge through faux indexicality; in Forget the Salad, a scented candle is melted onto a collaged surface, distilling and displacing the vertical time measure of the candles burning in the gallery into an already finished act.

The collaged texts in the works suggest incongruous, reflexive voices. Lifestyle copywriting cut from J. Crew catalogs, saturated adjectives extracted from Rolling Stone record reviews and urbane visions snipped from The New Yorker come together to describe scenes where assistance is always either sexual or professional. Language is used as a way to unmoor what is set forth by the presence of tangible items. Text from subway advertisements, banal statements from organic tea bags and girlish visions of romance - as printed on cheap leggings - are re-formatted as punk-ish back-patches, gesturing toward confused personal branding in an auxiliary world.

Though comprised of objects and phrasing taken from the everyday, the works portray a tenuous relationship with reality. Attempting a self-sufficient whirlpool of exchanges, Claflin traded her glass bottle paintings with other vendors on the Venice Beach Boardwalk for digitally printed spandex clothing and other accessories. Cut up and conflated, this apparel is sewn alongside bits of older, failed paintings, jewelry, trash, dried flowers, psoriasis ointment, eye shadow, feathers and other trimmings.

Sardonically mitigating a climate of wanton desire and multitasking, Claflin’s work offers a platform for confronting our expectations of painting, bodies, and the exchange value of femininity.

[Image: Whitney Claflin Van*iSh, 2012. Mixed media on canvas, 15 x 10 in.]

Media

Schedule

from May 24, 2012 to July 13, 2012
Performance: IMPULSE, Thursday, June 28, 7 pm

Opening Reception on 2012-05-24 from 18:00 to 20:30

Artist(s)

Whitney Claflin

  • Facebook

    Reviews

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