Think Giggle
'Fluff War' and 'Wildlife' are on view through June 15, 2019 at Anton Kern Gallery. All images courtesy the gallery. Lead image: 'Untitled (Exhibition of Dust)' David Shrigley.
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'Fluff War' and 'Wildlife' are on view through June 15, 2019 at Anton Kern Gallery. All images courtesy the gallery. Lead image: 'Untitled (Exhibition of Dust)' David Shrigley.
The images are as observational and detailed as the rooms depicted by Edward Hopper. Hong’s paintings are layered, but they are at arms-length of the impasto intrusion of an audience. They look alien and teeter on the border between a sci-fi conception and a political designation. They stick to the linen canvas, the figures held in muffled spaces, soft, thin and white like polished marble. They sit still with hardly a hint of direction (except for possibly a slippery floor leading to a sliding heel or the safety hazard of an extension cord leading to a scuffed chin). The paint lies almost behind the grain of the canvas, and there is barely a visible brushstroke. Compared to the directional brushstrokes of, say, Rembrandt, the image could lie flat. But Hong, like Rembrandt, has a love of textures. Although she expresses this love through the dressing of the figures (rather than the material), her clones slip into a stylish whiplash of time and tone. Rose jackets reflect light from a flaring open door. Meanwhile, a belted jacket dress sits in the shadows with a boxed shoulder, black leggings, and zig-zagging arm folds the color of red velvet drapery.
Jean Jacket, 2023
In all but one of the paintings, Hong’s clones adorn a blond wig that is voluminous, curly, sinuous and unusually white. (It references Bridgette Li’s ‘Woman in a Blonde Wig’ in the movie Chungking Express (1994).) The paleness and cool tones in most of the series push an eerie emptiness from the characters; they are emotionless, wigged and dressed nearly identically like mannequins. There are hardly any props in the vignettes, a teapot, a bed and an odd table or chairs. The scenes are not empty but bare in a late-90s sensibility that one could see in a commercial or editorial campaign. Prada’s Fall 1998 Campaign, shot by Norbert Schoener, was lit similarly, and the model (Angela Lindvall) was captured at the same lower angles as the viewpoints painted here. If the paintings were hung lower in the exhibition, the audience would likely feel like voyeurs or children, peeping into an uninvited scene with stone-eyed figures that hardly notice your existence and are indifferent to their own. Instead, they sit at eye level and confront the standing viewer like a phantom, anesthetized and hardly there. Hong tells a story through hollow robes. But they aren’t hollow, are they?
The numbed blue box-pleated skirt speaks to the corduroy shirt. The notched collars skittle down to short sleeves or ballooning cuffs, and the tied boot and smoking Malboros haze over the military green pants and their frayed hems. There is a requirement of mystery in art, one that either questions, berates, or assuages, or one that simply makes you stop. That is where the souvenir comes into play. The souvenir is an indicator, an image, an empty jar. A time marker in the visual fabric of our lives. Sure, the jar tells a story, but it is not whole. Its content is lost in the experience of another, and the viewer is faced with the choice of either looking at the facade or going deeper. Hong’s work doesn’t openly speak to the audience with a siren of symbols. The paintings talk to themselves from within the image, but you can’t hear it. As much as we are left on the outside, having not experienced the story behind the souvenir, there is still a story to be read. Under the wig and between the tentative gestures of these figures, there may not be a straight message to hear, but there's still that hum that comes from somewhere. All there is left to do is imagine.
The book also includes a portrait of Noguchi, who was already a consummate traveler before he first embarked on his explorations of Greece. The author provides a meditation on Noguchi's relationship with maverick architect Buckminster Fuller, who saw him for the person of the world that he was. This portrait deepens our understanding of him as an artist who was truly ahead of his time, and who sought to create a truly interdisciplinary practice that could shape the world in profound ways.
Noguchi and Greece, Greece and Noguchi also features Noguchi's Greece-centered works across sculpture, design, and architecture. These artworks are complemented by a series of responsive texts and artworks by contemporary design studio Objects of Common Interest, led by Eleni Petaloti and Leonidas Trampoukis. The book also includes a series of photographs by current practitioners inspired by Noguchi's interdisciplinary legacy.
This collaborative publication is a must-read for anyone interested in the intersection of art, design, and culture. It is a testament to the enduring power of Greece's artistic legacy and its ability to inspire artists from around the world. Whether you are a fan of Noguchi's work or simply interested in the rich artistic history of Greece, this book will transport you to a world of creativity and innovation that is truly unparalleled.
With Night Pictures Dunn set out to capture the unsettling sense of stillness and impending chaos that can come with nightfall. He affectionately situates all his subjects in the nighttime by showcasing his mastery of space by collapsing the studio, home and city into a singular set where life’s joys and grievances play out seductively. He mentions that “the emotions associated with the nighttime setting [serve] as a kind of narrative connecting tissue." He delights in showing the absurdity and performance ingrained in courtship and dating within our contemporary queer community illuminating moments we are all familiar with.
In “The Hunt” (see above), he paints the fixings of a night out: makeup, perfume, a drink and a wardrobe to die for. Dunn describes the show as “an interior show but not necessarily a quiet one." He takes us through the mundanity of his protagonist’s life with great care and detail. We are with him as he relishes in his image across a mirror. We lie in comfort with him aside a lover. We watch him in the throes of artistic practice, hand against the canvas. The men featured in Night Pictures are proudly depicted in their nakedness. As an audience we are encouraged to relish in this moment and savor the access given to us. Dunn implores us to stare as it’s naturally hard to look away.
His work has been exhibited in spaces around the world including PPOW Gallery, Marlborough Gallery, Grimm, Maria Bernheim and others. His latest solo exhibition was “The Fool” at Galerie Maria Bernheim in Zurich. View Night Pictures before it goes.