Wishy Washy
May 18, 2006 - June 24, 2006
Reception: May 18, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
134 10th Ave
Bellwether is proud to announce the opening of the Clayton Brothers first New York solo exhibition, Wishy Washy. After an indelible statement at Art Basel Miami Beach in 2004 and several solo exhibitions on the West Coast and in Houston, the Clayton Brothers intensify their vision for their New York debut. Wishy Washy will feature 14 paintings, more than 25 drawings, and a Laundromat themed installation.
Los Angeles artists Rob and Christian Clayton are brothers, collaborators, and the best of friends. Collectively they work as the Clayton Brothers, producing dynamic, improvisational, yet purposeful and humane paintings, installations and mixed-media works on paper. The Clayton Brothers’ approach to art-making is a collaborative process: one brother begins a painting, then hands it off to the other, then back again, and so on. Their art is narrative, autobiographical, uncanny and intuitive, culled from the secret language of a shared childhood. Rather than nostalgic musings about youth, the Clayton Brothers’ recollections of the past are revealed through a twisted lens of adulthood. At once epic and intimate, the Clayton Brothers’ layered paintings become stories where the matrix of two psyches – independent, but related – weave together elements of memory and the subconscious using the seemingly innocuous – the TV dinner, the toothbrush, the dastardly squirrel- as metaphors and messengers.
Their exhibition Wishy Washy is a fantastical allegory of the neighborhood in which their studio is located, and it’s denizens. Surrounded by aging strip malls, senior living complexes, dive bars and tanning parlors, the Clayton Brothers are witnesses to the lives of various characters who pass before their storefront studio. Implied narratives leave their mark and are channeled through each brother’s perception as they write the story of the neighborhood in images. The Laundromat becomes the locus where all of the stories converge and infuse themselves into the washers, dryers, walls and floors. The atmosphere resonates with the emotional and experiential residue of the patrons.
The Clayton Brothers’ narrative style is a kind of non-linear abstraction verging on reality. There is nothing premeditated or provincial about this work. The sheer bulk of characters with their untamed manners, liberty of movement, power in space, but also their elegance is conveyed with a masterly precision and economy of line that befits two artists with more than 20 combined years of art-making. The tonal qualities and the ingenious use of surfaces in the canvas and on paper, suggest a kind of cinematic perspective. The freshness of the pigments and the impact of the colors is a force on innocent eyes who are unaccustomed to visual forms outside nature itself.
Rob and Christian Clayton grew up in Aurora, Colorado, and graduated from Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California in 1988 and 1991, respectively. La Luz de Jesus Press published their book, The Most Special Day of My Life in 2003. Their installation Tim House was recently installed at the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art.
Art Reviews of Wishy Washy
New York Times June 16, 2006 | | Ken Johnson | | "...The paintings are packed to bursting with narrative action, graphic improvisation and echoes of artists like Barry McGee, Chris Johannson, Lari Pittman and R. Crumb. But the Claytons themselves are more clever recyclers of familiar styles than wildly original visionaries...." |
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Bellwether | | Address | 134 10th Ave New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-929-5959 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-6 | |
| |
|
© 2005-2008 chelseaartgalleries.com
The information on this page is provided "as is", and might be incorrect, incomplete and/or out of date. The site owner makes no representation as to the accuracy of the information or its suitability for any purpose. The owner disclaims any liability for errors that may be contained therein.
sitemap
|