This week’s Weekly includes my review of Peter Gourfain‘s solo exhibit at Projects Gallery and a sketch about Jina Valentine‘s inclusion in the Harlem Studio Museum show “Frequency.” That’s on the art page. In the listings section is my editor’s choice on the current Vox Populi members exhibit by William Lohre and Samantha Simpson. Here are Libby’s posts on Gourfain, Frequency and Vox.
The Humanist Body
Gourfain’s humanist focus reminds me of Kathe Kollwitz and Elizabeth Catlett. Faces and bodies are depicted monumentally in the broadest terms, using the bold black-and-white aesthetic that’s natural in block-cut prints. Lines are thick and dark, and light areas are the blinding white of the paper. It’s not a land of subtle lines and gray areas in either subject matter or technique.
Like many artists with a message, Gourfain uses words and wordplay to spell out his theme. The works are manifesto-like, and the words hit like a punch. “When money speaks, truth is silent,” says one (left). In Noho Pecan, the wide-spaced letters spell out a poignant revolutionary message: “No Hope Can Have No Fear.” Other works depict hands using sign language to convey their messages.
(chairs and ladders are other recurring visual motifs that have both literary and art-references)
Gourfain is a friend of artist Paul Santoleri, whose art is also in the activist humanist tradition. Santoleri’s exhibit “Linear Interference” is at the Painted Bride until Jan. 14, and the shows make exhilarating complementary viewing.
**(By the way, you can see Gourfain’s monumental carved and ceramic piece “Roundabout” at the Chazen until July 16, 2006. It’s been up since last July.)
“Peter Gourfain: What Folly … ”
Through Jan. 29. Projects Gallery, 629 N. Second St. 267.303.9652.
sketches
Valentine’s Day
Jina Valentine, an assistant director at Fleisher-Ollman Gallery (where she’s helped organize three hot emerging artists shows including the current “Meatballs”) is herself in a blockbuster New York exhibit. “Frequency” at the Studio Museum in Harlem is billed as a roundup of “35 of the hottest emerging black artists of 2005.”
The show is great, and Valentine’s work stands out for its spiritual questing, surprising materials and crafting.
(top image is installation shot of one of Valentine’s two pieces in the show. Next image is a detail.)
The artist works with found materials. She installed a large wood panel covered with yellowed ’50s-era kitchen wallpaper into the gallery wall, inset like a perverse wallflower. Halfway down the panel she carved a complicated lacey but random pattern into the wallpaper skin and pulled the carving off the wall so it drapes curtainlike onto the floor.
Her Appetite for Destruction: Top 40 Best Selling Albums piece refers to music and remixing. But its references to skin, walls and infrastructure evoke the lives of women and domestic labor that’s taken for granted. A meditation on loss, love and home, the work is a grandchild of Rothko and Eva Hesse.
(last image is Valentine’s smaller work in the show, also called Appetite for Destruction: Top 40 Best Selling Albums. The artist told me in an email that the Studio Museum has just purchased the piece!)
Through March 12. Studio Museum in Harlem, 144 W. 125th St., New York. 212.864.4500.
editors picks
“Bill Lohre: Red and Yellow Alert” and “Samantha Simpson: The Problem of Prevost’s Squirrel”
Through Jan. 2. Vox Populi Gallery, 1315 Cherry St., fourth fl. 215.568.5513.