Tag Archives: dependance

LA ART BOOK FAIR 2020 ONLINE

Support your independent press. The LA ART BOOK FAIR 2020 has moved online, with links to all scheduled exhibitors and publishers.

From top: AA Bronson, After General Idea, courtesy and © the artist and Three Star Books, Paris; Jill Johnston, The Disintegration of a Critic, edited by Fiona McGovern, Megan Francis Sullivan, and Axel Wieder, courtesy and © Sternberg Press; Daido Moriyama, Visions of Japan, courtesy and © the artist and Komiyama, Tokyo; Linder, The Myth of the Birth of the Hero IV, 2012, courtesy and © Linder Sterling, Modern Art, London, Dépendance, Brussels, Andréhn-Schiptjenko, Stockholm and Paris, and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles, New York, and Tokyo (Linder, Linderism, Cambridge: Kettle’s Yard, 2020); McKenzie Wark, Reverse Cowgirl (2020), courtesy and © the author and Semiotext(e); Matthew Brannon, Avery Singer, 2015, courtesy and © the artist, JRP Ringier, and Art Catalogues.

WEEKLY WRAP UP | NOV. 24-29, 2014

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This week on the blog we listened Florencia en el Amazonas at the LA Opera; we passed by Dependance to see the new show of Micheala Eichwald; we went to the West Hollywood Public Library to listened a talk on the exhibition trans.ient; we talked about the new trilogy of short films by Yuri Ancarani; and we had a look on Allen Ruppersberg’show at Greene Naftali.

MICHAELA EICHWALD AT DEPENDANCE IN BRUSSELS

In August, we posted some pictures from Michaela Eichwald’s last exhibition at Palais de Tokyo in Paris. It was the first time that I saw her work, and I must say I was really impressed. New paintings by Eichwald are are currently on view at Dependance Gallery in Brussels until mid-December. The show is titled Ziele im Leben, and I highly recommend it. Here are some pictures!

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© 2014 Sven Laurent – Let me shoot for you

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© 2014 Sven Laurent – Let me shoot for you

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© 2014 Sven Laurent – Let me shoot for you

From Roberta Smith’s review in The New York Times:

Michaela Eichwald, who is German and in her mid-40s, is one of the most interesting artists around. She paints effortlessly in ways at once nasty and nice, fluid and crusty, weird and astute. Sometimes spare, sometimes dense, her abstract paintings have an evident body language that reflects frequent use of her fingers, hands and feet as tools. This insinuates the currently fashionable association with performance, but also creates an elemental sense of the painter moving across the surface.

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© 2014 Sven Laurent – Let me shoot for you

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© 2014 Sven Laurent – Let me shoot for you

Michael Eichwald was born in Cologne, and still lives and works there.

Ziele im Leben will be on view at Dependance, Brussels until December 19.

RICHARD ALDRICH | GLADSTONE GALLERY | BRUSSELS

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels, (image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels
(image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

RICHARD ALDRICH

Gladstone Gallery, Brussels

Exhibition on view until June 7, 2014

Gladstone Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Richard Aldrich at our Brussels location. The exhibition is being presented in collaboration with dépendance, which will host a concurrent exhibition on view April 24 through May 24. The two exhibitions feature paintings, drawings, and sculptures created over the course of the past decade that highlight Aldrich’s interest in the way in which objects can be used to explore the impact of time on our understanding of ourselves and the world around us. Through each work, many of which were created over the course of multiple years, or returned to after a duration of time, Aldrich provides a rich visual representation of the evolution of objects — how, as we age and change, our conception of the things close to us is altered as well. This notion is reflected in his works, which, even when finished, evince a sense of continuous becoming, suggesting the possibility of future growth and change.

Eschewing a particular art-historical definition of or vantage point from which to view his art, Aldrich sees his artistic practice as a constantly evolving force. Taken as a whole, his work defies a singular style, and in his drawings, paintings, and sculptures, Aldrich is able to move effortlessly between figuration, abstraction, and representation – often combining imagery variously inspired by people and places close to him, visual artists, writers, and musicians whom he finds interesting, and experiences drawn from his everyday life. Using a variety of techniques, such as thick and thin painting, removing portions of canvas from his work, and multi-media assemblage, Aldrich has developed an artistic style that turns away from the canonical understanding of art historically, in favor of exploring new conceptual processes through which to view the contemporary world as he sees it.

The works on view represent the broad spectrum of Aldrich’s practice and, when taken together, read as a microcosm that encapsulates a series of moments caught in time. Among the works on view are Reality Painting #6 (A Wall in My Bedroom) part of Aldrich’s ‘Reality Painting Series,’ a body of work that playfully adopts the art-historical idea of a series as a way to organize ideas, and which depicts scenes from Aldrich’s everyday life. Also on view is Stacks, a sculpture that brings together four elements of previously exhibited sculptures to create a new complete work. This piece reflects Aldrich’s interest in using re-contextualization to explore new ways in which objects can be engaged with and understood, an idea that is further expanded upon by virtue of the fact that this work was shown in his recent show at Bortolami Gallery in New York, and is now being revisited and approached anew. Among the works on view at dépendance are Untitled, a painting that is composed of a trilogy of novels from the Cyberpunk role-playing game universe Shadowrun, suspended from the canvas in mid-air, and the drawing One Kind of Sleight of Hand, which features the transparency that was used to create the painting Two bodies as One that was shown at dépendance in 2009.

Aldrich was born in Hampton, Virginia, and currently lives and works in New York. He has been the subject of solo exhibitions at: San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, and the Contemporary Art Museum, St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri. He has also been included in group exhibitions at notable institutions including: Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, Texas; Tokyo City Opera, Tokyo; Centro Galego de Arte Contemporánea, Santiago de Compostela, Spain; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels (image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels
(image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels (image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels
(image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels (image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels
(image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels (image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

Richard Aldrich, installation view, Gladstone Gallery Brussels
(image http://www.gladstonegallery.com)

 

THE HAWKER

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The Hawker, 2014, Installation view (image Carlos/Ishikawa)

The Hawker

dépendance at Carlos/Ishikawa, London

March 14 – April 12, 2014

ARTISTS: Richard Aldrich, Marie Angeletti, Thomas Bayrle, Will Benedict, Merlin Carpenter, Michaela Eichwald, Jana Euler, Christian Flamm, Olivier Foulon, Manuel Gnam, Thilo Heinzmann, Karl Holmqvist, Tom Humphreys, Sergej Jensen, Dorota Jurczak, Michael Krebber, Martin Laborde, Linder, Michaela Meise, Oscar Murillo, Shelly Nadashi, Henrik Olesen, Benjamin Saurer, Nora Schultz, Hanna Schwarz, Lucie Stahl, Josef Strau, Simon Thompson, Harald Thys & Jos de Gruyter, Oscar Tuazon, Peter Wächtler, and Haegue Yang.

 

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The Hawker, 2014, Installation view (image Carlos/Ishikawa)

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The Hawker, 2014, Installation view (image Carlos/Ishikawa)

Jana Euler, Human Small World, 2011, Papier-mâché, 60 x 20 x 20 cm

Jana Euler, Human Small World, 2011, Papier-mâché, 60 x 20 x 20 cm (image Carlos/Ishikawa)

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The Hawker, 2014, Installation view (image Carlos/Ishikawa)

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Oscar Murillo, another kind of breed (detail), 2014, Wooden crates and porcelain 34 x 72 x 183 cm (image Carlos/Ishikawa)