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hpgrp gallery New York

EVENT
Exhibition Detail
Happy Life: Near-Life-Sized Drawings
Curated by: Shuhei Yamatani
32-36 Little West 12th Street
2nd Floor
New York, NY 10014


January 10th, 2008 - February 16th, 2008
 
Hairy Ladder,Jorge Julian AristizabalJorge Julian Aristizabal, Hairy Ladder,
graphite on paper, 75 x 34 in
© Jorge Julian Aristizabal
> QUICK FACTS
WEBSITE:  
http://www.hpgrpgallery.com/
NEIGHBORHOOD:  
chelsea
EMAIL:  
jenn.gallery@yahoo.com
PHONE:  
212-727-2491
OPEN HOURS:  
Tue-Sat 11am-6pm, Sun 12pm-6pm
TAGS:  
Aristizabal, Julian, Jorge, McDade, Eric, drawing
COST:  
Free to Admire
CHILDREN:  
This event is appropriate for children
> DESCRIPTION
Two artists draw near-life-sized images
in black & white, finding meaning.

How does it make you feel?

Jorge Julian Aristizabal
In celebrated Colombian artist's U.S. debut, he
employs six different pencils to draw big
daydreams from a happy place.

Eric McDade
This laugh-out-loud-funny humorist
draws upon irony and whimsy
and how these play out between us.

Running until Saturday, February 16, 2008

Current Show in sister boutique destination's ground floor gallery
SHOW & SELL: The $99 Art Fair
http://going.com/99ArtFair

hpgrp gallery New York
32-36 Little West 12th Street, 2nd Floor
(between Ninth Avenue & Washington Street)
New York, NY 10014
212-727-2491
www.hpgrpgallery.com

Gallery Hours:
Tue-Sat 11am-6pm, Sun 12pm-6pm

Subway:
A, C, E, L to 14th Street at 8th Avenue

Buses:
M14 (9th Avenue at 14th Street)
M20 (8th Avenue Abington Street)
M11 (Bethune/Hudson Street)

Jorge Julian Aristizabal:
Creating images that awaken the language of the unconscious is where the foundation of my work lies. I've always been intrigued by the way some images affect me and how I react to them. I am interested in images not only that expresses "ideas" but also dispute those ideas, creating a sense of confusion that alters my perception, where the familiar becomes unfamiliar.

I find a great deal of pleasure in creating images based on fragile structures that challenge and defy our sense of balance and order, both through the physical and the natural world. Defining concepts that not only demonstrate how vulnerable we are, but remind us of our emotional confusions, frustrations, and disappointments, as well as our sense of hope, enlightenment, joy and humour. I am interested in a paradoxical image that generates ambivalent feelings, i.e.: "Is the bird headless or is it perpetually trapped," such as the confusion between seriousness and the absurd, compassion and mockery.

At the end of the creative process there is the expectation of making work capable of moving the viewer. Silently making them an accomplice in the web, their turmoil and perception forces them to reflect on whether they have become the spider or the prey.

Eric McDade:
Giving in to the fear that a secure, healthy relationship could mean certain death for someone whose bread and butter are the dregs of interpersonal experiences, Eric McDade risks stunting his evolutionary growth and continues to drink from the same old stagnant well of self-pity-tainted social malignancies in order to bring forth his most recent suite. The resulting body of work is, again, one that begs from the viewer as much sympathy and praise as can be neatly separated from the lint in one's pockets. A couple of pieces not withstanding, the primary theme is one of discontent with the behavior of those around him, as is with most of McDade's past work.


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