Babel: New Paintings and Works on Paper
May 8, 2008- June 21, 2008
Reception: May 8, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
527 W 26th St
Mary Ryan Gallery is pleased to present Babel, an exhibition
of new paintings and works on paper by
Josh Dorman. This is
Dorman’s first exhibition at
Mary Ryan Gallery.
Since 2001 Dorman has been using topographical maps as
a framework for the complex ideas and images that fill his
paintings. Combining ink, acrylic and collage atop antique
maps and paper, he creates fantastical universes that explore
the connectedness of all things.
Using collage elements from old textbooks and elaborating
on them with his own drawing, Dorman suggests links
between the natural and the man-made. He is particular
about the maps and collage elements he uses: the maps
must be pre-1940, and the textbook images are all prephotographic
diagrams or engravings. While Dorman’s works
compel one to look for a narrative, his suggestions are subtle.
What each viewer reads is entirely their own interpretation.
Rich in detail, Dorman’s paintings encourage discovery. The works continue to open up and unfold as the viewer
approaches them. Forms and meanings reveal themselves to Dorman as he works. At times he lets the maps dictate
where he goes, following a maze of sepia lines or playing off the name of a river, town, or mountain range. He often
works on several fragments of paintings at a time, carrying around pieces of maps, drawing on them throughout the day,
and later weaving them into the larger composition.
Dorman’s intricate works are vast and multi-layered, linking themes of war, creation, and destruction. Influenced by
Hieronymus Bosch and Pieter Breughel, Dorman uses symbols and allegories to comment on the contemporary world
and human nature. Babel, the title work in this exhibition, is made of up 32 two individual panels completed over many
months. Each panel is like a building block needed to create his Tower of Babel. The title alludes to Babel, a historically
and biblically referenced city that epitomized utopian ideals while simultaneously representing the destruction of a
unified humanity.
Sum, 2006, is a monumental painting (88 x 120 inches) done on 75 adjoining panels. The left side of the painting is
dominated by mechanical forms—assembly lines of gears, wheels, robots, and machine parts moving along suspended
conveyor belts that appear out of nowhere. Suspended bridges and tunnels emerge and retreat, as blocky edifices give
way to craggy peaks and a tangle of forest.
Also on view are several single-panel paintings as well as small works on paper that Dorman calls “Poems,” which were
inspired by a leather-bound volume of antique paper. These intimate works contain only a few collage images combined
with his drawings. Much more immediate in process, these spare, mysterious drawings possess an inherent harmony.
Josh Dorman lives and works in New York City. He received his MFA from Queens College in New York and has had many solo gallery exhibitions
across the country. Dorman will be the subject of an upcoming solo exhibition at the Craft and Folk Art Museum in Los Angeles from August 23
to January 11, 2009. He has been written about in the Los Angeles Times, New York Times, ArtForum, The New Yorker, and by the acclaimed author
Paul Auster.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Mary Ryan Gallery | | Address | 527 W 26th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-397-0669 | | Fax | 212-397-0766 | |
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