Pure (a group exhibition)
March 24, 2007- April 28, 2007
Reception: March 23, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
528 W 29th St
Sean Kelly is delighted to announce a group exhibition Pure, which opens on March 24. The
exhibition brings together works in diverse media that address the formal qualities of the color
white and reflectivity. The exhibition continues through April 28. The opening will take place on
Friday, March 23, from 6pm until 8pm.
Leonardo Da Vinci stated: “The first of all single colors is white ... We shall set down white for the
representative of light, without which no color can be seen.” The color white has conventionally
been seen as a symbol of purity and clarity. The exhibition has as its starting point Marcel
Duchamp’s readymade Why Not Sneeze, Rrose Selavy, comprised of 152 pieces of white marble
meticulously crafted to resemble sugar cubes.
Joseph Beuys’s For Washing , used in a famous
performance in 1977, consists of a white washbasin and a bar of soap.
Marina Abramovic’s
Cleaning the House utilizes quartz crystals signifying the rituals of everyday activities. Iran Do
Espirito Santo’s Water Glass sculpture, made of pure solid crystal, creates the illusion of a vessel,
which is full of clear water.
Several artists in the exhibition reject traditional categories of painting and sculpture to explore
new modes of art making which result in a plethora of unprecedented aesthetic and critical
practices, ranging from industrially produced geometric abstractions, negating the hand of the
artist, to text-based investigations.
Joseph Kosuth utilizes a quote by Wittgenstein, produced in
white neon, while the minimalist sculptor
Dan Flavin uses commercially available fluorescent light
fixtures.
Jenny Holzer is represented by an LED sign that continually displays aphorisms in white
lettering, and
Sol LeWitt has created a new white wall drawing for the exhibition.
Though disparate in intent and formal resolution, the thirty-four works that fall under the rubric
of Pure share an abiding impulse of paring a work of art down to its core color– be it a perfect
cube, a basic repetitive gesture, or a simple declarative phrase. These works of art elicit diverse
aesthetic responses to white, reflective surfaces, and the play of light and shadow contrasted with
solids and voids.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Sean Kelly Gallery | | Address | 528 W 29th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-239-1181 | | Fax | 212-239-2467 | | Hours | Tue-Fri 11-6, Sat 10-6 | |
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