Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2016. Show all posts

April 29, 2016







Peter Piller at Projecte SD


Since the late 1990’s, Peter Piller (Fritzlar, Germany, 1968) has been dealing with one of the most defining traits of the so-called information-era: the impulse towards the creation and development of archives. The information-era is, of course, the most recent and extreme state of the quite ancient phenomena of collecting, organizing and storing data. History (as a practice, as well as as a narrative) is – in a sense, at least – a very direct consequence of this impulse. And History, with its need for sound proofs and indeniable references, got ever more interesting since photography came about. For the last two centuries, not only historical reporting but pretty much the whole of comunication has been resting on a highly specialized game of making a collective sense of visual materials that, when freed from any sort of caption, say precisely nothing, but are in themselves all so very telling. This fluctuating, artificious capacity of the visual record to act as the anchor of meaning has been the focus of Peter Piller’s artistic practice. His on-growing archive, bearing several thousand found pictures distributed by more than 100 categories, has served as his primary tool for a critical (and often humored) analisis of the shifting ideological ability of images, of the overruling power of the category, and, ultimately, of the frailty of the visual structure of meaning and its multiple subliminal endeavours.
Assembled around the title Don’t Hate the Player. Hate the Game, the majority of the pieces shown in this exhibition belong to two different categories from the Peter Piller’s archive: Umschläge (2011-12) and Bereitschaftsgrad (2015). The first one is composed of twenty pieces showing found front and back covers of as many editions of an East German military magazine titled Armeerundschau. Published between 1956 and 1990, Armeerundschau was the National People’s Army medium of choice to inspire and prepare young men for their military service. Cleared of all text but maintaining every element of graphic design originally used in the magazine, these full-color couplings of girls and guns are presented here alongside – and, for the first time, interspersed with – black-and-white counterparts, also found as spreads in the inside pages of the same magazine (Bereitschaftsgrad), as well as single-image, large-scale pieces that, by way of their less explicit or direct nature, throw a puzzling level of ambiguity into the mix (Blicke).
The importance of the serial component of Peter Piller’s production does not pass unoticed in this exhibition. In fact, repetition and variation are once again key factors in the experience of this artist’s works. If repetition functions here as an anihilator of narrative – that is, as the  element that lets us know immediately that there is no story being told – variation is, on the other hand, the factor that allows us to concentrate on the slight differences these images carry with them – the minor details through which the ideological apparatus of a military prop magazine comes to show. It is therefore pretty understandable if one finds oneself moving on from the blatant display of power and violence contained in the soldiers’ images and the varying degrees of sexual innuendo of the girls’ pictures, into an even more disturbing realization of the inner workings of a carefully designed structre of meaning: one that correlates pleasure and pain, tenderness and violence, technology and flesh, sacrifice and reward, sexual drive and melancholy, equating and effacing everything under the spell of the perfect photographic composition.

February 5, 2016










Elizabeth Kley at Canada (New York)


For Ms. Kley's first solo show with the gallery, she will include works on paper, a wall painting, and ceramic pieces that refer to Weiner Werkstatte, Studio Craft and the history of excessive decoration.


 Kley takes her title from the famous Shelley poem of the same name about a ruined monument to a long forgotten despot. The poem is set in an unnamed strange locale and its themes include hubris and the inevitable decline of empire. It may seem apt, given the current political climate, to consider history as a series of blustery strongmen who naturally fall into the abyss of time.  Kley, on the other hand, offers joy instead of pontification. Here we have unabashedly extravagant designs both mysterious and inviting, weightless manifestations of the past.


 Kley’s current black and white ceramic vessels and drawings are inspired by Islamic, Byzantine and Asian historical ornaments and can be described as somewhere between all-over paintings and decorative sculptures. Repeated bold calligraphic patterns are filled with life-giving symbols and designs including flower petals and leafy tendrils.


The vessels are made from hand rolled scraped coils and fired in a large electric kiln in her studio.  Decorations are applied using homemade underglazes containing oxides and stains, with wax resist and sgraffito. The artworks are not only beautiful to look at but are also made with an artisan’s care and ingenuity. When colors appear, they are as deep and yummy as a brand new box of crayons. Dripping glazes reveal an appealing unfussy temperament, and forms sometimes seem to imply bulbous fruits like pomegranates or flowers. Although she sometimes renders traditional motifs directly, Kley’s works are rarely strict copies. Instead, they are personal inquiries into visually pleasurable shapes, colors and patterns. Each piece is unique, but also seems to be part of a larger whole. 


Elisabeth Kley lives in Manhattan and works in Brooklyn. Solo and two person exhibitions include translucent threads of dawn at Regina Rex (with Conrad Ventur); A Sign of Eternal Beauty at GAVLAK Palm Beach (with Florence Derive); Large Red Lotus Sun with Yellow Face at 39 Great Jones, The Queen's Feathers at John Tevis Gallery, Paris; Peacocks and Bottles at the Georgian National Gallery in Tbilisi, Republic of Georgia; and Momenta Art. Kley's work was recently included in Jack Pierson's Tomorrow's Man 2. 


Elisabeth Kley’s exhibition marks the gallery’s expansion into a second exhibition space at 331 Broome St.  For more information please visit www.canadanewyork.com