17
April–17 May, 2009
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Art (External links)

Press Release
In
his second exhibition of painted timeline drawings at Pierogi, Ward
Shelley has expanded his concerns from the lives and careers of individual
artists (as in Re-materializing Art, 2006), to mapping the
role of art as a shaping force in the world in Who Invented the
Avant Garde – and other half-truths.
Shelley's timeline pieces are expansive graphic depictions of complex
relationships between events and people over time, linked by a subject
or idea. For example, in The Beats he tracks the lives, loves,
and artistic output of the primary Beat Poets and their muses, using
highway-like lines to trace their travels and travails.
Driven by their content, Shelley's drawings are rich in factual detail,
yet often present highly subjective points of view. The unorthodox presentation,
in turns borrowing from graphical conventions and improvising with an
eccentric and personal hand drawn style is, in a sense, the speaker's
voice, giving the stories their color and spin.
The eponymous and central painting in the show explores and interprets
the history of the Avant Garde, from its nascent murmurings, to its
radical heydays, and eventual domestication and aestheticization. Owing
a large debt to Alfred Barr's famous chart about the sources of Cubism
and Abstract Art for this piece, Shelley re-visits the Barr Diagram
itself in another drawing, Addendum to Alfred Barr, extending
it forward and backward through time.
A piece commissioned by Bomb magazine, Downtown Body, lays
open the 100-year corpse of art and bohemianism in downtown New York.
In addition to the visual arts, lines trace theater, music, and literature,
graphically depicting the rise of the scene and the explosion of interdisciplinary
work as a network of intersecting veins and organs. Also noted are the
beginnings of downtown institutions, including the Whitney Museum, which
began as a studio club a stone's throw off of Washington Square Park.
A limited edition of prints of this piece will be on sale for the benefit
of Bomb.
Matrilineage is a celebration of American woman painters –
beginning with the impressionist Mary Cassat – who achieved enduring
careers prior to the 60's and second wave feminism, in a world frequently
hostile and unsympathetic to independent women with strong voices. Hundreds
of individual lifelines are included, giving visual weight to their
largely overlooked contributions.
Other strong voices that receive treatments are Andy Warhol (as filmmaker)
and Frank Zappa.
Beyond the topics they are illustrating, these pieces are about the
attempt and process of forming understandings which, in Shelley's estimation,
are dynamic and utilitarian but always partial. Since our understandings
of the world both re-form us and change the world, it is poignant that
they are by necessity never more than approximate. Consequently, Shelley
rejects the idea of authoritative finality and rather sees these works
as presenting arguable points of view.
The exhibition continues in the back gallery with Shelley's performance
installation The Sleeper Experiment. From April 16
to April 30, during regular (daytime) gallery hours, the artist will
sleep in the gallery as he has in the past, this time inside a cabinet
made for the purpose. He will work during the night on drawings based
on information provided by visitors. The visitors, virtual or actual,
are invited to contribute random input (in the form of words, short
phrases, or images) that will become the basis for concept maps. This
input will be read to the artist by a speaking computer program during
his sleeping hours. In the evening he will rise and begin drawing, leaving
the results on view for the following day.
Submit your
input to <sleeperexperiment@gmail.com>
More info and guidelines at : Sleeper
Experiment (external link)
Ward
Shelley is best known for his installation / performance work, notable
among which are his previous exhibitions at Pierogi: We
Have Mice and The Cube;
as well as Flatland at the Sculpture Center, Mir2
at Smack Mellon, and W.A.S.P.
at the Museum Moderner Kunst, Vienna.
see Ward Shelley's
Re-materializing Art exhibition
see Ward Shelley's We Have Mice installation
see Ward Shelley's
interactive Cube installation