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The New Yorker / Arlene Shechet

Goings on About Town: Art

ARLENE SHECHET

The yeowoman sculptor scores with a large show of works in fired clay: visceral masses and heaped strands on brick or cracked-wood-block pedestals and stools. Some verge on the animate; others surge sideways as if in a wind or an undersea current. Bulbous vessel forms, flipped, evoke Olmec heads. Odd glazed colors tickle the eye. Intimately brawny, the show lets us in on the studio eurekas of an artist with energy and second-nature mastery to burn. Through Oct. 9.

Art Review / Yvonne Venegas

Yvonne Venegas: Maria Elvia De Hank Series 

La Guera y Nirvana

Issue 44, October 2010.

 By Ed Schad 

The US/Mexico Border is a supercharged issue at the moment, and Yvonne Venegas’s current photographic series is of the times: a group of large documentary photos of the life of the ‘upper class’ of Tijuana, Mexico. With access to the household of former Tijuana mayor Jorge Hank Rohn, Venegas directs her lens to the familial ordinary, from the planning of dinners and weddings to the family simply living in its surroundings. ‘How the other half lives’ photography can be terrible if the ideological hand of the photographer is played too forcefully. Fortunately, Venegas understands that for an LA viewer who knows the photographs were taken in Tijuana, thoughts of the border and problems of immigration in Mexico and the US arrive effortlessly and undidactically. Though this effect will probably diminish for audiences elsewhere, Venegas achieves enough universal human content to maintain one’s interest in her subject.

You’ll find nothing ostentatious or overplayed in Venegas’s photographs, perhaps because the ability of Rohn’s Tijuana household to achieve the outlandish is somewhat limited. For instance, the sad little swamp, Lago (2007), is far from a lush garden. Eventually the small pool will be a symbol of wealth and leisure, but at the moment it cannot but be absorbed by the poor landscape of hardscrabble Tijuana. Other Venegas photographs use a similar tactic – the family matron working intensely on a rather ridiculous, gaudy candelabra in Velas (2008), or a large party tent being constructed in the centre of a paltry dirt track in Hipodromo 1 (2006). Such misplaced attentions of wealth at play against bleak landscapes gives Venegas’s photographs a certain understated power.

 

Class is offered as a series of markers that separate the rich from the poor, the sophisticated from the gauche, and they are far from extraordinary. Venegas wants to connect the tiny gesture, the indicative moment, to larger issues such as wealth disparity, status and injustice. The leisure class is portrayed straight ahead and engaged in their pursuits, not immersed in any sort of decadent behaviour. Instead, a pair of stilettos on a dusty road, a bored child on a satin couch and a new fútbol stadium on the near side of a fenced boundary is enough to evoke the larger shadow of poverty hanging over this world.

The photos are laden with subtlety, restraint and empathy; their subject matter is much closer in sensibility to the early work of Tina Barney than, say, to Daniela Rossell’s Ricas y Famosas (1994–2001). The Rohn family is presumably staying put, with no need to emigrate, yet a window into their life quietly points to the vacuum that allows the disenfranchisement of millions. Often, the working poor employed by the Rohn family are noticeable in the photos, but their presence is not amplified. They are neither suffering nor happy; they simply exist in a status quo that will continue into the foreseeable future. 

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Gallery Opening for SW2

Last Minute Intervention

September 10, 2010

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Gallery opening for SW2

Last Minute Intervention

September 10, 2010

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present the inaugural exhibition of the SW 2 initiative.Last minute Intervention is a group exhibition featuring work by Leyden Rodriguez Casanova, David Gilbert, Nick Kramer,Zak Kitnick, Fay Ray, Harriet Salmon,…

Shoshana Wayne Gallery is pleased to present the inaugural exhibition of the SW 2 initiative.

Last minute Intervention is a group exhibition featuring work by Leyden Rodriguez Casanova, David Gilbert, Nick Kramer,
Zak Kitnick, Fay Ray, Harriet Salmon, and Frances Trombly.
 
The exhibition utilizes a recently vacated storefront in Bergamot Station. Formerly a hair salon, the artists in the exhibition seek to address the peculiarity of the space with interventions of their work. The space is left as it recently was, leaving relics of the beauty industry behind with installed sinks and walls flanked with mirrors. The artists in the exhibition directly utilize the space, and have chosen to create and place work, which engages with the eccentricities of the space and its past usage.

PLEASE JOIN US FOR OUR OPENING TOMORROW SEPTEMBER 11th.
Looking forward to seeing you then!

PLEASE JOIN US FOR OUR OPENING TOMORROW SEPTEMBER 11th.

Looking forward to seeing you then!

Congratulations to our Artists!

Dinh Q. Lê   “Living in Evolution"  Busan Biennale, Korea

Zadok Ben David   "Living in Evolution"  Busan Biennale, Korea

Nicole Cohen   “Close Encounters”, New Video Work, Rio Hondo College, Whittier, CA.

Phil Argent   “Softcore HARD EDGE”, The Art Gallery of Calgary Calgary, Alberta, CA.

Mounir Fatmi   Musée d'Art Moderne de Moscou, Moscou
                        Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, France

Congratulations to Oliver Michaels & Arlene Shechet

Oliver Michaels is included in the exhibition, “Rude Britannia: British Comic Art” at the Tate Britain in London, UK. The show will run through September 5, 2010.

Arlene Shechet is included in the XXIst International Ceramic Biennial (BICC) in Vallauris, France from July- November 2010.