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For
your love
20 November – 20 December, 2009
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on thumbnails to view larger images

Press
Release
Pierogi is pleased to present an exhibition of recent video, sculpture,
and drawing by John Stoney. Much of Stoney's work takes the form of a
landscape. Through changes in perspective or focus the meaning of the
original subject shifts, layering and sometimes obscuring the collective
understanding of, in most cases, a place. Working with the history and
visual language of the 19th century romantic tradition of landscape painting,
Stoney's art re-examines historical and contemporary approaches to the
question of whether meaning is inherent in nature or imposed by the viewer.
The video and the show are both titled For your love. The vantage
point of the video—looking north along the Hudson River from the
battery at West Point—is positioned exactly where a 19th century
painter would have stood and shows the familiar view of many well known
landscape paintings, with the exception of the middle ground where a kettle
of vultures circle. This landscape was carved out of the Hudson highlands
by the retreating Laurentide ice sheet about 12,000 years ago. It looks
now just as it did then, 12,000 years before the military academy and
its attendant philosophies existed, and it will be recognizable as the
same landscape 12,000 years after the academy has gone. “The video,
as with all the work in the show, conflates romantic love and longing
with Freud's Todestrieb or death drive, and the 19th century
romantic notions of the sublime and catastrophism with modern scientific
understanding of geology and deep time.” (Stoney)
Corner Piece (after Caspar David Friedrich’s ‘Der Wanderer
über dem Nebelmeer’), is a sculptural reproduction of
the figure in Friedrich’s painting (Wanderer Above the Sea of
Fog) and here conflates the point of view of the wanderer and the
artist. The figure is taken out of the context of the landscape and his
gaze appears isolated as the key component. Friedrich maintained that
"The artist should paint not only what he sees before him, but also
what he sees within him.” Here Stoney traces the connection between
the German romantic landscape tradition (in particular, Friedrich’s
contribution to it) to the American Hudson River School painters, but
he simultaneously removes the figure from the romantic setting thus placing
the work within a conceptual framework.
"Often Stoney’s sculptures contain juxtapositions that foreground
the relationship between ancient natural phenomena and the modern world,
on which mankind has stamped out its place. The Sword and the Stone is
a rather playful visualization of this idea. A cast of a petrified log
and some surrounding rocks and dirt provides the setting for a tiny cocktail
sword, suggesting at once the antiquity of fossils and the ephemerality
of contemporary structures of power." (Chelsea Weathers)
The three landscape drawings are colored pencil enlargements of small,
1.5 x 2.5 inch landscape snapshots from the early to middle 20th century
that Stoney has collected for their enigmatic beauty; “a beauty
which I attempt to understand by applying to landscape photography John
Ruskin's belief that drawing from life is the only way to have a true
understanding of nature.”
The threads connecting all of these works are Stoney’s long-standing
love of nature, the beauty of landscape, and his interest in the grand
scale of deep geological time and space and our insignificance within
it; the insignificance that this artist feels equally in the face of an
awe-inducing landscape and a great work of art, and the longing and desire
that each produce.
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