There were giants in the earth in those days
September 14, 2006- October 14, 2006
Reception: September 14, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
542 W 24th St
Freight + Volume is pleased to announce
James Everett Stanley’s first New York solo exhibition.
“There were giants in the earth in those days” – a cryptic passage in Genesis that hints at the interbreeding
between humans and angels - kickstarts Stanley’s figurative journey that weaves humanity into myth.
Exploring the myriad meanings and motives of this phrase, Stanley takes a broader exegetic stance, using
this line to open a door to a time where anything was possible. It was a time when man was so young, and
his understanding of good and evil so nascent, that there was an explosive and inspiring sense of
innocence.
Through large-scale canvases and delicate watercolors, Stanley casts present day man in this context,
creating provocative parallels that cut to the nature of morality. In Two Figures, Stanley creates an uneasy
tension between two young men and the viewer: one in full, heroic, battle regalia (a self-portrait of the artist)
- the other in casual civilian attire, capturing a moment of ambivalent calm before the storm. Stanley’s
subjects are typically attired and accessorized in a historically dualistic manner: ranging from the primitive to
the paramilitary, tribal masks to gas masks.
As though blurring the distinction between his modern subjects and a biblical setting, Stanley‘s paintings
appear to belong to no particular place in time, each form firmly rooted in the flesh. With himself, family
members, and others close to him as his focus, Stanley’s explorative journey leads the viewer through a
succession of pleading, witnessing, and unveiling gazes. As the poet Kirsten Andersen said of his work:
“The collected images in this body of work are people and objects in motion, people still engaged in
the life process, still breathing the vitality of breath, but not without making adaptations...The
portraits could be mirrors—the subject staring back at its reflection, in search of itself”
n the project space, Stanley takes on a more playful approach, with a series of watercolors that allow him to
concentrate on specific objects. Cars, guns and other items seen in stark isolation, take on the air of
artifacts, picking up on the modern/mythic qualities found in his paintings. These narrative fragments feel
like references to a previous era, providing an historical take on Stanley’s painted epics and cloaking the
pieces in mystery.
James Everett Stanley lives and works in New York City. He received his MFA from Columbia University, New York,
in 2005. Early this year Stanley exhibited in Freight + Volume’s project space and has recently been included in two
group exhibitions at Bucket Rider, Chicago, IL and at Fredric Snitzer Gallery, Miami, FL. In 2005, Stanley was the
recipient of a Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation Studio Program space and participated in residencies at Skowhegan
School of Painting and Sculpture 2002 and Fine Arts Work Center 2002-2003.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Freight + Volume | | Address | 542 W 24th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-989-8700 | | Fax | 212-989-8708 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-6 | |
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