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Bronx
River Art Center presents:
Mind
over Manner
curated by José Ruiz
January
19 – February 24, 2007
Opening Reception:
Friday, January 19, 6 – 9pm

"If
you like conceptual art think about honking,"
bumper sticker, circa 1977
Brian Balderston, white noise/white boise, 2007, installation detail
Jason Balicki, The J.B.
Pyramid: Art is Excellence, Excellence through
Purpose, 2007, performace/installation
Kathryn Cornelius,
Do Nothing Machine & Deliverables, 2006-2007,
performance/installation
Jean-Michel
Crapanzano, Peace, Love and Pitbulls, 2007, installation
Marc Ganzglass, Dies
from Garo, 2007, installation
Mechele Manno, Untitled
(gathering napkins), 2005-2007, installation
Chad Stayrook, Boxing
with the Stars, 2007, performance/installation
Gallery
Hours
Monday-Friday
3 – 6:30pm
Saturday 11 – 5pm
Bronx,
NY..... Mind over Manner, curated by José
Ruiz, brings forth seven interdisciplinary emerging artists whose
actions and gestures deconstruct Conceptual Art’s overarching methodology
and historical canon. By entertaining the notion of post-conceptualism,
the artists in this exhibition bestride the fence of past and future idea-based
artwork with a desired manner of production; an amalgamation of performance,
installation, video, photography and sculpture, with artistic tactics
of subversion, humor and absurdity for good measure.
White
Noise / White Boise by Brian Balderston (Brooklyn, NY)
is a sculptural station housing video, sound and sculptural objects. Setup
as an architectural vitrine, Balderston uses minimal modernist gestures,
such as the sharp fabrication and high gloss finish of his objects to
entice the viewer into a cultural void or state of blankness. Once inside,
an audio feed extracted from a sleep aid CD streams a constant waterfall
that co-exists with masses resembling ziggurats or even abstracted modernist
furniture. As the viewer encircles the main structure they come face to
face with a video of the artist presenting a suite of lectures on dry
erase board on hot button topics such as whiteness, the relationship between
surface and structure, subjective notions of progress and the human being,
as well as personal narratives on geographic and cultural dislocation.
These vignettes are an obvious nod to Joseph Beuys’s chalkboard
lectures and attempt to dislocate the slick cultural sheen apparent in
our society as well as the mutability derived from it.
The
J.B. Pyramid: Art is Excellence, Excellence through Purpose, by Jason
Balicki (Brooklyn, NY) is a performance installation consisting
of a large walk-in pyramid that serves as the production and fabrication
facility for consumer-sized gold souvenir pyramids, each stamped with
the J.B. monogram and insignia that reads: Art is Excellence. During the
opening reception, the souvenir pyramids will travel on a conveyor belt
from the production area to the Scatter Your Seed Packing Area where they
will be individually wrapped, boxed and dispensed by a live mummy proletariat,
Balicki himself, as he hastily works in the production tomb and gathers
himself in the Creation Station Break Room throughout the evening in an
attempt to raise his level of achievement.
Kathryn
Cornelius (Washington, DC) construes the term performance and
its use in the art and business worlds to decipher the ratio between output
and expression and the process by which meaning or product is siphoned
from one’s individual performance. Deliverables, is a faux-vintage
video that appropriates the visual language of a corporate management
training seminar while referencing Erving Goffman’s text, “The
Presentation of Self in Everyday Life” (1959) and a collection of
performance measurements aptly titled, “Perfect Phrases for Setting
Performance Goals” (Douglas Max & Robert Bacal, 2004). By juxtaposing
two different studies on performance, Cornelius sets off a playful critique
on performance art’s tenuous role within the contemporary art market.
The video is further amplified by the sculpture and performance, Do Nothing
Machine, an enlarged replica of a crafty relic commonly used in the carpentry
field as a beginner’s woodworking exercise and as a toy or trinket
for kids. The Do Nothing Machine does what its name suggests; nothing.
During the opening reception, Cornelius will operate the Do Nothing Machine
in direct quotation to mainstream society’s view on contemporary
art, “It doesn’t do anything...”
Jean-Michel
Crapanzano (France/Netherlands) explores the edge between propaganda
and visual art. Before the age of Photoshop or tabloid magazines’
constant doctoring of images to sell a story, the use of falsified photography
has been a long running strategy to control public perception and memory.
The most notorious cases come from Stalinist Russia where it was commonplace
for Soviet history to be rewritten with inconvenient participants clumsily
removed from all forms of pictorial existence. Even those who had aided
the Communist Revolution in its early stages could easily turn from heroes
to villains overnight and crudely disappear from all official Soviet photographs.
Leon Trotsky is perhaps a perfect example. Adopting this visual form of
erasure, Jean-Michel Crapanzano’s project is comprised of new photographs
and wall paintings that displace identity in figurative images. From local
hipsters in Eindhoven, Netherlands, where the artist lives, to the recent
G8 Summit held in Russia, the blatant and apparent disappearance of certain
figures exalt a notion of creating new histories rather than attempting
to discredit past ones.
Dies
from Garo by Marc Ganzglass (Brooklyn, NY) is a large-scale
installation comprised of hundreds of steel rule dies formerly used by
the Garo-Savon Die Cutting Co. to stamp out the fabric shapes necessary
to produce clothes, bags, hats, etc. Due to recent outsourcing of jobs
to India and China, this longtime Brooklyn business declared bankruptcy
and after twenty-plus years closed its operations in 2006. Ganzglass had
been renting out a portion of Garo-Savon’s factory as an artist
studio and they had the typical relationship of a failing small business
and homesteading artist. When Garo Savon closed its doors Ganzglass inherited
crates full of dies, worth tens of thousands of dollars. The dies shown
here are a glyphic record of many of our consumer goods and now represent
the last vestiges of the American garment industry. As a collection they
serve to archive both a global economic shift, and the awkward local phenomena
of art subsuming industry. These dies will be available for free, as a
collection or as individual pieces to anyone who is interested.
For
more than two years, Mechele Manno (New York, NY) has
maintained a symbolic and almost compulsive au-plein-air practice of archiving
her everyday routines to investigate her role as a consumer. Manno’s
ongoing project, Untitled (gathering napkins), is a mapping and tracking
system of the amount of napkins systematically given to her by a vendor
after purchasing a coffee or a beverage throughout New York City. Each
stack of napkins, inscribed with the date and time of the exchange, suggests
an artistic moment. The amount in each stack alludes to the relationship
between customer & vendor and the number of stacks outlines the artist’s
personal needs. A missing date says more. Where was Manno that she did
not need a beverage? The napkin, as object, is a metaphor for cleanliness,
personal comfort and the assumptions made between two strangers.
In
one corner, Chad Stayrook (New York, NY) checks in with
Boxing with the Stars, a six round performance and installation in which
the artist goes head to head with his conceptual predecessors in an attempt
to break free from their historical shadows and influence. In his sculptural
boxing ring, complete with ropes, punching bag and a set of robotic arms
acting as the collective entity of his opponents, Stayrook will battle
Marcel Duchamp, Vito Acconci, Joseph Beuys, Andy Warhol, Paul McCarthy
and Matthew Barney one grueling round at a time. All six of these legends
have held the Conceptual Heavyweight title belt at one point in their
careers so it will not be an easy match for the young Stayrook. They will
make their presence known via streaming videos embedded inside a punching
bag and aside from mocking and belittling Stayrook; these heavies will
also take the time to honor the crowd with vignettes on their work and
grand ideas. On a more intimate level, the work also references an artist’s
need to stand out and shine through the dynamics of a group show in that
each round purposefully symbolizes the other six artists included in Mind
over Manner.
About
the Curator:
José Ruiz is an artist and curator working in
New York City. He is the Gallery Coordinator at the Bronx River Art Center
and the Workspace Resident Artist at the Jamaica Center for Arts &
Learning in Queens. Ruiz’s recent curatorial projects have included
Appropriately Yours at Transformer Gallery (Washington, DC), Concrete
Domain at the Bronx River Art Center and the 2004 San Francisco Video
Artists’ Festival. His work is currently featured in Black Now,
curated by Fred Wilson, at the Longwood Arts Project in the South Bronx.
The Bronx
River Art Center Gallery is committed to polishing the sharpest side of
the
contemporary art blade.
*Sample images
are available upon request:
jruiz@bronxriverart.org
Travel
Directions:
Train: IRT # 2 or 5 to East Tremont Ave. Walk one block east.
Bus: #s 9, 21, 36, 40, 42, or Q44 to East Tremont and Boston Road.
Car: Bruckner Expressway to the Sheridan Expressway and exit at Tremont
Ave., or Cross Bronx Expressway to Rosedale Ave. Exit.
Credits:
This program is made possible with public funds from The New York State
Council on the Arts a state agency and federal funds from the Department
of Youth and Community Development and the Department of Cultural Affairs
and it’s Material for the Arts program; Bronx Borough President
Adolfo Carrion Jr., The Bronx Delegation of the City Council and US Congressman
Jose E Serrano’s WCS-NOAA Lower Bronx River Partnership. Corporate
and foundation support includes: Con Edison; Time Warner Youth Media and
Arts Fund; The Carnegie Corporation; The New York Community Trust and
The Helena Rubinstein Foundation. Additional support is provided by JP
Morgan Chase through the New York State Multi Arts Consortium (NYMAC);
the Ford Foundation through the Bronx Council on the Arts and the generosity
of our patrons.
Top of page
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| Brian
Balderston |
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| Jason
Balicki |
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| Kathryn
Cornelius |
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| Jean-Michel
Crapanzano |
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| Marc
Ganzglass |
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| Mechele
Manno |
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| Chad
Stayrook |
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