> DESCRIPTION
The
exhibition investigates how art offers alternatives to our subjective and often
predetermined perceptions of every day life and the reality as a whole. It
proposes a query into our current and generally shared territory of veracity
asking if it is merely an amalgamation of phantasmagorical images brought by
annotations of both direct and indirect social experiences and realized through
acumen sustained by various beliefs, traditions and practices that often fail
to rise above our everyday reality.
The
concept of perception is challenging as it unites philosophical and cultural
visualizations, through actions of both the unconscious and active
consciousness. Considered in the right context, perception can be stripped of
its allegorical denotation and the exhibition is an invitation to participate
in this process. It is rather apparent that for any investigation into the
construction of history, either shared or individual, a perception must first
be established, yet how well can we communicate our relative truths and what
tools do we use to transmit meaning? One way in which the presented artists are
implementing this is through a personal and collaborative study of the
ambiguous realm where a conceivably tenuous line divides the individual and our
collective perspective.
For
this body of work, Shana Lutker fuses the unconscious with the corporeal to
evoke a perception construct through the ephemeral states of her dreams. Often
a by-product of her own everyday experiences juxtaposed with references to
Sigmund Freud and the commonly accepted vernacular of psychoanalysis, these
dreams uncover the hidden inner workings of our unconsciousness. The residual
of that process has been produced as a comprehensive recording of the
artist’s dreams that occurred within one year and a series of drawings
and narratives in the form of newspapers, publications and catalogues.
Justin
Beal and Mateo Tannatt present a video taken from a collaboratively produced
show “Alteration Demonstration: Tasteful Guidance”. The video
documents the artists at a deconstruction of a useless, old sofa in order to
make room for needed exhibition space. A seemingly unassuming act, the process
of the removal takes roughly 45 minutes to complete while the partakers seek
help of hammers, electric and non-electric saws, knives and spray paint.
Simultaneously to the action another removal takes place – colored dots
cover the artists’ heads forcing the viewer to abandon any presumed
identities. The dots also appear on a second monitor in a synchronized
animation obfuscating the apparent parallel in favor of an abstract, yet poetic
connotation.
Shana
Lutker received her MFA from UCLA in 2005 and her BA from Brown University
in 2000. She is preparing an upcoming solo exhibition at the CCA Wattis
Institute in San Francisco,
CA, curated by Jens Hoffman. Past solo shows include the Room Gallery
at UC Irvine and the Wetterling Gallery in Stockholm, Sweden.
She was also included in the California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of
Art, and in group shows at The Project, New York,
Harris Lieberman, New York, D’Amelio
Terras, New York, Sweeney
Art Gallery,
UC Riverside, CA and the Kunstverein Langenhagen in Langenhagan, Germany.
Justin
Beal received his MFA from USC this year and his BA from Yale in 2001. He has
had recent solo exhibitions at Sculpture
Center in Long Island, and at
LA><ART in Los Angeles.
His work has been included in the Moscow Biennial, at the Moscow Museum of
Modern Art, and group shows at the Sweeney Art Gallery, UC Riverside, CA; Casey
Kaplan, NY; De Appel Centre for Contemporary Art in Amsterdam, and MAK Center
at the Schindler House in Los Angeles, CA.
Mateo
Tannatt received his MFA from UCLA in 2007 and his BFA from Cooper
Union in
2001. His solo exhibition includes Guild & Greyshkul, New York in
2005, and group exhibitions at Gavin Brown's Enterprise at Passerby,
New York,
Rivington Arms, New York, Daniel Reich Gallery, New York, and Black
Dragon Society, Los Angeles.