Home
Extension
Curated by Sabine Russ and Gregory Volk
On view at the University Art Museum
January 21 through April 10, 2004
Opening Reception: Wednesday, January 21, 5:00-8:00 p.m.
Free and open to the public
ALBANY, NY — The University Art Museum
is pleased to announce the exhibition Home Extension curated
by Sabine Russ and Gregory Volk . This exhibition
features works by ten international artists who respond to the
theme of 'home' as a place of refuge, memory, support, occasional
conflict, love, and connection. Through their work, an understanding
of 'home" shifts from a physical place to a psychological
space that is movable, transportable, and complex. The artists
are Sebaastian Bremer, Beth Campbell, Fred Holland, Kimsooja
Joachim Koester, Odili Donald Odita, Ragna Róbertsdóttir,
Karin Sander, Ward Shelley, Roman Signer.
Sabine Russ is a German writer
and curator. Gregory Volk is a Brooklyn-based
art critic and independent curator. He writes for Art in
America and is a Visiting Professor at the University at
Albany, SUNY.
In Home Extension, Volk and Russ
bring together ten artists whose work relates in specific and
idiosyncratic ways to the University Art Museum's, Edward Durell
Stone-designed space. Four site-specific installations are planned. Avoiding
narrative, all of the works in Home Extension focus
on how the transformative possibilities inherent in one element,
such as color, light, pattern, or texture can elicit an instantaneous
sense of catharsis.
Sebastiaan Bremer's intricate
and embellished ink drawings on old photographs extend the private
domain of personal memory into the poetic realm of unfettered
possibility and magical transformation. In her video installation Same
as Me, Beth Campbell records her daily
routine in triplicate. Without variation or release, Campbell
carefully choreographs quotidian moments and turns them into
a revelatory experience about the individuals place in the world. Fred
Holland transforms a singular found or organic material
like pennies, black-eyed peas, or onionskins into art works that
echo processes historically associated with African-American
traditions. Through repetitive acts such as slicing, hammering,
and piecing together, Holland's ephemeral installations become
personal testimonies to the magic imbedded in black folk art
and the sensibilities rooted in home, migration, and longing. In
her sit specific installation, A Laundry Woman , Kimsooja presents
brightly colored traditional Korean bedcovers suspended from
the ceiling. Resembling drying linen or unidentifiable
flags, these disconnected emblems evoke a host of domestic possibilities
including love, sex, rest, privacy, and comfort. At the
same time, the cloth is free flowing, transparent, and temporarily
situated, all conditions that point to a nomadic existence. By
resituating the simple bedcover,
Kimsooja foregrounds the complex issues that
surround conflicted longings for both worldliness and stability.
Modernist plans for utopian communities in remote geographic
locales run amuck are the subject of Joachim Koester's haunting
photographs. In his neutral documentation of semi-inhabited
landscapes, he reveals a stark disconnect between imposed constructs
and the reality of living under their shadow. Odili
Donald Odita's outsized acrylic paintings fuse different
idioms including art history, contemporary discourse, traditional
African art, digital technology, and personal experience. Deceptively
lyrical in appearance, each painting heralds the rewards of free-flow
discovery and hybrid knowledge through a force field of vibrating
color and zigzagging planes. Ragna Róbertsdóttir's luminous
minimal wall works are made out of lava chips from Icelandic
volcanoes. Depending on the way light hits them, these elemental
works channel the vastness of the Icelandic outside, with all
its geological and mythical connotations, into the interior gallery
space where they depict neither place nor thing, but embody both . Karin
Sander works across a range of media and disciplines
to call into question habitual ways of seeing both within and
outside the gallery context. Her interventions into existing
situations --like her intensely polished wall segments that turn
mundane surfaces into glimmering visual fields--impact the surrounding
environment in unexpected ways. Under Sander's unflagging hands-on
attention, the most innocuous surface or locale becomes a magical
site where subtle sensory perception is transformed into full-blown
revelation. Ward Shelley 's hybrid explorations
into how individuals occupy and navigate their immediate environment
include video, interactive installation, and mechanical engineering.
In each of these projects, Shelley proposes a journey defined
by self-imposed obstacles. Whether turning a simple walk through
the park into a monumental adventure or negotiating
the twists and turns of a small cube with interior maze-like
corridors, Shelly never passes up the chance to extract meaning
out of lived experience, no matter how absurd the construct may
be. R ooted in the experience of conceptual art and the
spectacle, Roman Signer presents a series of
action sculptures that involve carefully planned and strictly
executed plans. Usually enacted close to home, his simple and
direct actions bring a poetic twist to the scientific concept
of cause and effect. By video recording each experiment,
Signer leaves an aesthetically compelling and often comic trace
of what happens when human folly butts up against the forces
of nature.
ARTIST BIOGRAPHIES:
Sebastiaan Bremer has had recent solo exhibitions
at Roebling Hall in Brooklyn (2003) and Galerie Barbara Thumm
in Berlin (2003). He will be showing at Air de Paris in
Paris (2004).
Beth Campbell's recent solo exhibitions include Same
as Me at Sandroni Rey Gallery in Los Angeles (2003) and
Roebling Hall in Brooklyn (2002). Selected group exhibitions
include Online at Feigen Contemporary in New York
(2003); Hello My Name Is at Carnegie Museum of Art
in Pittsburgh (2002); and Greater New York at P.S.
1 Contemporary Art Center in New York (2000).
Fred Holland has had recent solo exhibitions
at PPOW in New York (2003) and Momenta Gallery in Brooklyn (2002)
and has been in recent group exhibitions at P. S. 1 Contemporary
Art Center in New York (2003); The Drawing Center in New York
(2003); and Exit Art in New York (1999).
Kimsooja's recent solo exhibitions include Mandala:
Zone of Zero at The Project in New York (2003); Conditions
of Humanity at Musée d'Art Contemporain in Lyon
(2003); A Needle Woman at Zacheta Gallery of Contemporary
Art in Warsaw (2003); Kunsthalle in Bern (2002); and P.S.1
Contemporary Art.
Joachim Koester's has had recent solo exhibitions
at Kunsthalle Nürnberg in Nürnberg (2003); Greene Naftali
Gallery in New York (2000); and AstrupFearnley Museet in Oslo
(1999). His work has been featured in group shows at Kunst-Werke
in Berlin (2003); Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago (2002);
Moderna Museet in Stockholm (2000); Documenta X in Kassel (1997);
and the Johannesburg Biennial (1997).
Odili Donald Odita will have solo exhibitions
at Galerie Schuster in Frankfurt (2004) and Galerie Schuster & Scheuermann
in Berlin (2004). He has had other recent solo shows at
Matrix Art Project in Brussels (2003) and Florence Lynch Gallery
in New York (2001). His work has been featured in group shows
at The New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York (2003); Yerba
Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco (2003); Artist Space
in New York (2002); Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia
(2001); and The Studio Museum of Harlem in New York (2001).
Ragna Róbertsdóttir's recent
solo exhibitions include At the Threshold of Visibility at
The National Gallery of Iceland in Reykjavík (2003); A
Longing for Landscape at Horsens Kunstmuseum in Horsens,
Denmark (2001); and Katla at Reykjavík Art Museum
(1999). Selected group exhibitions include Three Walls at
i8 Galleri in Reykjavík (2002); Confronting Nature at
The Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington (2001); and microwave,
one at 123 Watts Gallery in New York (1999).
Karin Sander has had solo exhibitions at Staatsgalerie
Stuttgart (2002); D Amelio-Terras in New York (2000); Kunstmuseum
in St. Gallen (1996); The Museum of Modern Art in New York (1994);
and at many other prestigious museums and galleries throughout
Europe and America. Selected group exhibitions include A
Simple Plan at James Cohan Gallery in New York (2003); In
Full View at Andrea Rosen Gallery in New York (2003); White
Spectrum, Open Ends at The Museum of Modern Art in New York
(2000); and Skulptur Projekte in Münster (1997).
Ward Shelley will have a solo exhibition at
Pierogi in Brooklyn (2004). Past solo shows include The Cube at
Pierogi in 2001; Colony at Islip Art Museum in Long
Island (2001); and Voyage Platform at Socrates Sculpture
Park in New York (1998).
Roman Signer's work has been presented at some
of the most prominent events in contemporary art including Documenta
8 in Kassel (1987); Skulptur Projekte in Münster (1997);
and the 48 th Biennale in Venice (1999). Recent selected
solo exhibitions include Roman Signer , Sammlung Hauser
und Wirth in St. Gallen (2003); Recent Works , Shiseido
Gallery in Tokyo (2003); Margo Leavin Gallery in Los Angeles
(2002); and Roman Signer , Galleries I, II, & III
at Camden Arts Centre in London (2001).
A fully illustrated color catalogue will accompany
the exhibition For further information or visual materials,
please call (518) 442-4035 or visit our website at www. albany.edu/museum.
MUSEUM
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and Sunday noon to 4 p.m.
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