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Ascensions

Polaert writes in the press release, “I felt the urgent desire to assemble a group of some of my favorite artists to reflect a deep sense of hope and optimism.”

 

As you enter the eerie collection, you see a haunting, spectral Nastassja Kinski in Gregor Hildebrandt’s So nah so weit (So close, so far) (2013), a melancholic photograph of a reflection in a reflection. The next piece, Chinatown Voyeur (1971), a film by Gordon Matta-Clark, “presents a long, static shot, out of the window of an apartment on Chatham Square," benevolently spying from dusk until dawn. The portrait of Nastassja Kinski almost overlooks this gently voyeuristic piece.

 

The works chosen for “Ascensions” are all in conversation with one another in a nuanced and intriguing manner. A crisp cast of a partially collapsed step stool, created by Mitchell Charbonneau (Step Ladder [Partially Collapsed] (2020)), is like a left-behind sign of a construction worker’s day, and Alicja Kwade’s scattered fall leaves in Time Machine (2016) are sprinkled around as if contextualizing it.

 

You won’t want to miss out on this eerie yet friendly exhibition that Natacha Polaert seamlessly formed, calling upon artists that are for the most part, dear friends of her’s.

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