VISIBLE AND PERMANENT
@ Carrie Secrist Gallery
Carrie Secrist Gallery, 835 W Washington Blvd.
Opening Friday, March 17th, from 5PM - 8PM
On view through Saturday, April 29th
Carrie Secrist Gallery is pleased to announce the group exhibition VISIBLE AND PERMANENT.
Artists participating include:
Mariano Chavez (Chicago)
Austin Eddy (New York)
Andrew Guenther (New York)
Brook Hsu (Los Angeles)
Carmen Price (Baltimore)
Michael Robinson (Los Angeles, New York)
Brion Nuda Rosch (San Francisco)
Adam Scott (Chicago)
Jenn Smith (Chicago)
“Art as an important part of (sic) ceremonial is a conscious and determined effort to make important symbols visible and permanent.”
– Phillip H. Lewis, A Definition of Primitive Art, 1961.
VISIBLE AND PERMANENT explores the complex relationship between the concept of civilization and it’s antecedent, so-called primitivism. The artworks presented in this exhibition bring together a group of contemporary artists who are mining the ideologies of origin while firmly entrenched in the now. Cumulatively, these visual representations are not defined by artwork that is socially oriented, political, representational or abstract – but something altogether more visible, authentic and intuitive. Individually, each artist presents his or her individual mark as a permanent gesture that traverses back in time, comments on the now and embraces the future.
Primitive art can be a loaded reference. Primitivism, as an historical paradigm, ultimately finds it’s value in what it is not: civilized. As such, for over a century, artists have mined non-civilized societies for their creative outlets either through the appropriation of forms and symbols (Picasso) or embracing a life style and becoming immersed in a simpler way of life (Gauguin). Ultimately, the implications of defining “primitive” are rooted just as firmly in creativity as it is in exploitation. Whatever the definition of civilization might be, one of the roles of the artist is to place their mark on it while simultaneously challenging it as a construct in an evolving, relentless pursuit.
Themes presented in VISIBLE AND PERMANENT include ceremonialism, evolution, mysticism and pointed strains of humor. The variety of mediums on view: painting on canvas (Jenn Smith), drawing (Austin Eddy), collage and photograpy (Michael Robinson), gouache (Carmen Price) – and the strategies for employing that media: poured paint (Adam Scott), simple motors (Brion Nuda Rosch), household rugs (Brook Hsu), UV rays (Mariano Chavez), Picasso’s signature (Andrew Guenther), reveal a complex mix of contemporaneous strategies that have endured. The ideas brought forth by the artists here, firmly rooted in 21st century ideologies intertwined as individuals and artists, take this dirty term and contextualize it as a cultural embrace – a thoroughly modern art sensibility.
[IMAGE: Carmen Price, over volume, resolute, 2016. Gouache on paper, 24 x 18 inches.]
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Tags: Adam Scott, Andrew Guenther, Austin Eddy, Brion Nuda Rosch, Brook Hsu, Carmen Price, Carrie Secrist Gallery, JENN SMITH, Mariano Chavez, Michael Robinson, near west side, VISIBLE AND PERMANENT

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