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Exhibition Detail
Suddenly...Summer
Curated by: Sarvia Jasso
526 W. 26th St.
Suite 814
New York, NY 10001


June 17th - July 17th
Opening: 
June 17th 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
 
,
© Courtesy of Venetia Kapernekas Gallery
 Self Portrait 3,Kathryn GarciaKathryn Garcia, Self Portrait 3,
2009, unique drawing (pencil on rag paper), 22 x 30 in
© Venetia Kapernekas Gallery
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Venetia Kapernekas Gallery is pleased to present Suddenly...Summer, an exhibition by New York-based artist Kathryn Garcia. Curated by Sarvia Jasso, this is the first installment of a series of exhibitions in which artists are invited to consider the aesthetics and fabrication of madness in art.

In 1922, the psychiatrist and art historian Hans Prinzhorn published Artistry of the Mentally Ill, a detailed analysis of drawings by patients in the hospital at the University of Heidelberg. The importance of this book not only lies in his interpretive analysis, but also in Prinzhorn's emphasis on the work's aesthetic qualities. Correlating mental illnesses with distinct visual codes of representation, this groundbreaking study eventually caused outsider artists to gain recognition within certain artistic circles—including those of Jean Debuffet, Max Ernst and the Surrealists. For example, Ernst’s collage entitled Oedipus is said to have been based on a drawing by the schizophrenic German artist August Natterer. The Surrealists were captivated by these patients' freedom from reason and appropriated comparable stylistic characteristics and motifs that became emblematic of their work. This appropriation, in turn, sparked interest in the artist's personal life, continuing to propagate the cult of the artist.

In a similar vein, Garcia’s new drawings blur the line between artist and autobiography, fact and fiction, by manipulating the tensions between them. Meticulous and loose lines create figures that, upon closer inspection, reveal tiny orifices or sexual organs. Inspired by the artist Franz Xavier Messerschmidt, who was deemed mad by psychologists based on analyses of his sculptures, Garcia simulates  “insanity” in a number of unnerving self-portraits. These drawings are part of a larger body of work in which Garcia explores how the fetish of madness arises in post-modernity, as seen in recent Hollywood films.

To accompany the drawings, Garcia will also exhibit a video montage using the 1959 film starring Elizabeth Taylor, Suddenly, Last Summer, which is based on the play by Tennessee Williams. Taylor’s character, Catherine, suffers from "dementia praecox", a mental illness that supposedly causes her to "babble" about her cousin Sebastian's secret life—more specifically, his latent homosexuality. Combining scenes of Catherine in various guises of insanity with moments of total clarity, Garcia constructs a seductive and unnerving interpretation of madness. For example, a close-up of Taylor as she falls asleep is suddenly disrupted with a hysterical cry for help. Madness, as seen through the eyes of the other, manifests itself in this beautiful creature.

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