Diamonds Cut Diamonds

June 22, 2006- July 29, 2006

Reception: June 22, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Brian Basnett, Dave Choi, Morgan Herrin, Kate Horne, Ryan Kitson

Rare

521 W 26th St


Johnston Foster has curated a fantastically wild and beguiling group sculpture show featuring five artists who utilize commonly available, mundane materials to create sculptures that are by turns whimsical, poetic, humorous, soulful, and occasionally a little scary.

RARE is pleased to announce the opening of its summer group show Diamonds Cut Diamonds: Curated by Johnston Foster. A showcase for five emerging sculptors making their New York City debuts, the exhibition emphasizes each artist's hands-on exploration of materiality, process, and creation. In presenting objects made of the most mundane materials varying widely in scale, material, and concept, these artists strike a balance between whimsy and soulfulness, humor and creepiness.

Brian Basnett's sculptures are the product of a loose, poetic and spontaneous approach to object- making. Having no hierarchy when using and choosing materials, his sculptures exemplify their construction in a melancholy manner. Using found plastics that he melts and reconfigures, his versions of a wheelbarrow and a hammer have an awkward, even ghostly presence. Basnett pulls out the essence of an object, and re-presents it so that the soul of that object is laid open for all to see in its barest and purest form.

Dave Choi's sculptures at first seem inspired by science fiction, but on further inspection appear to be closer to what soon could be science reality. Mutations, cancers, the changing environment, and fragile ecosystems fuel Choi's imagery as he fabricates a series of over-evolved creatures in the midst of a constant struggle to survive. Just as his creatures seem to be the result of ongoing mutation, his practice is that of an artist creating work through a constant process of altering his materials through hands-on problem solving as he makes his work.

Morgan Herrin carves Classical Roman/Renaissance-inspired sculptures from pink and blue foam with a skill and craft worthy of the artists he simultaneously pays tribute to and critiques. Driven by the quest to create the ideal physical form, Herrin complicates matters by subtly asserting his fascination with internal anatomy. In his two untitled works (both 2005), he exposes a large open slice of skull and brain in the perfectly carved bust of Caesar, and shows a cross-section of bones, veins, and arteries in his flawlessly carved, oversized hand of Adam inspired by Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel.

Kate Horne's imagery derives from her own universe of made-up characters and creatures that are the starting point for all of her work. Her personal mythologies are a reflection of her relationships, experiences and observations, both big and small. Applying various techniques to paper, she has created two horse heads that seem to be in violent and unbreakable conversation with each other. The horses come alive with twisted manes, neither of the two acknowledging the folly of their incompatible reasoning. Horne reflects on our own realities by following her impulse to create parallel worlds and then filling them with a cast of characters that are more like us than we would care to admit.

Ryan Kitson makes objects that are simultaneously subtle, critical, and smart-ass. Well-versed in casting, mold making, and other industrial methods of object making, he uses these skills in creating sculptures that at first seem overly self-aware of their institutional form of creation. This soon gives way to his subtle application of insidiousness inspired by mass-produced dollar store trinkets, cheap imitations of high-end objects, and society's obsession with consumption and waste. Kitson's work simultaneously fills that niche and mocks it.

Curator Johnston Foster's second solo exhibition at RARE took place this past spring. In 2004, he exhibited in one of the project rooms at PS 1 Contemporary Art Center in Long Island City, New York. A group exhibition at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco followed in 2005, along with a solo show at Brigham Young University Museum of Art in Utah. He completed a residency at Castle Trebesice in the Czech Republic in 2004, and a subsequent exhibition of the work he created there was held at Futura Gallery in Prague in 2005. Upcoming exhibitions include a solo show at University Galleries, Illinois State University (Spring 2007), which will travel to other university museums, and at galleries in London and Chicago.

Books and DVDs related to artists in this show
Location 
GalleryRare
Address521 W 26th St
New York (Chelsea)
NY, 10001
United States
Phone212-268-1520
Fax212-268-1523
HoursTue-Sat 12-6









© 2005-2008 chelseaartgalleries.com | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Map
HomeShowsCalendarArt WorldGalleriesArtistsPeopleBooks & GamesLogin » filter on/off  
Last Chance·Just Opened·About to Open·Current Shows·Receptions·Tour Organizer·Tour by Street
Sponsors
Advertisement

Upcoming Guided Tours

September 20, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Sat)
Chelsea with Margaret Mathews-Berenson
September 27, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Sat)
Chelsea with Riva Blumenfeld
October 4, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Sat)
Chelsea with Riva Blumenfeld
October 11, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Sat)
Chelsea with Margaret Mathews-Berenson
October 18, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Sat)
Chelsea with Riva Blumenfeld
October 25, 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm (Sat)
Chelsea with Margaret Mathews-Berenson

Recently Added Art Books


My Personal TourOrganize | Share | Print


No Shows in Your Tour Yet
Click on the +Tour Button to Add a Show

Advertisement