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hpgrp gallery New York

EVENT
Exhibition Detail
SWEET DREAMS Group Show
Curated by: Shuhei Yamatani
32-36 Little West 12th Street
2nd Floor
New York, NY 10014


March 5th, 2008 - March 30th, 2008
Opening: 
March 5th, 2008 6:00 PM - 8:00 PM
 
Kneeling Ballerina in Black Oval,Margaret MurphyMargaret Murphy,
Kneeling Ballerina in Black Oval,
2007, watercolor and acrylic on paper, 60" x40"
© Margaret Murphy
> 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
COST:  
FREE to Find Joy through Art
CHILDREN:  
This event is appropriate for children
> DESCRIPTION

hpgrp gallery's next opening wine reception is for group show


Sweet Dreams

Wednesday, March 5, 6-8pm

Running until Sunday, March 30, 2008


Margaret Murphy
Nancy Friedemann
Sandra Bermudez
Andrew Chan

Featuring four artists' truly sweet things,
pretty paintings and little animals,
even some "nightmarishly sweet" things, as one artist describes his detailed, grown-up
papier-mache creations.

~~~

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)

~~~

 

 

Margaret Murphy takes cues from mass-produced figurines, knick-knacks and keepsakes to examine how material culture reflects and influences ideas of gender, culture, race and history. By painting these "artifacts" in a realistic style, she allows the mass-produced figurine to stand in for the human form, raising provocative questions about human issues. Margaret's method of working is "creative documentary" because of her use of elements that already exist in the culture to make comments on the culture, allowing viewers to bring their own experiences and memories to the work. Her newest body of work, The Ballerina Project, examines the overly romantic notion of this icon of femininity and the proliferation of these images in the culture. From billowing tutus to music-box ballerinas reflected in oval mirrors, her paintings take an up-close view of the ballerina myth.

Sandra Bermudez's artwork probes issues surrounding love, relationships and marriage. Exploring aspects of couplehood and the conventions associated with love and sex, Sandra often addresses the uncomfortable and frequently unmentioned issues surrounding marriage. Sandra presents familiar animal imagery but shows them in new contexts with a playful range of humor, irony, wit and satire as well as with deeper critical reflections on social and gender values. Using sculptural objects like little birds, she focuses on the more mundane aspects of couplehood and explores the balance between gender and housework. The objects' lush tactility and "cuteness" draws the viewer in, but the reality of the animal's exhausted positioning questions domestic power relations.

Nancy Friedemann manipulates symbols that deal with ideas about femininity and the role of women in art history. She draws, paints and present s these issues in an over-the-top gorgeous way. By reenacting the process of making lace through drawing and painting, Nancy captures the nature of lace making and creates monumental works, intricate yet done with tiny strokes. Painting some of the sweet things women have been historically associated with, like lace, flowers and embroidery, Nancy monumentalizes them and gives them a heroic place and scale that can remind one of high macho modern art.

Andrew Chan's architecture training and childhood love for building plastic model kits merged with knowledge from old DIY craft books to create works using papier-mache, a method that appears fragile but is durable enough to function as furniture. Using this perceived fragility to denote a precarious survival instinct, works like Andrew's intricate papier-mache vending machine, "No Change Given," serves up everything one needs in case of an emergency. Household products mixed with the absurd are packaged, branded and marketed into objects for popular consumption. In drawing, the basis of all his work, Andrew uses an edgy and/or frenetic line that conveys his interest in entropy and its consequent cycle of construction and deconstruction. In his work, line is a measure by which the organic and the inorganic emerge to create representations-in some cases, bordering on caricatures-of people and objects. W ork ing in unison , the elements t ell a story that can be both compelling and disturbing.

 


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