Showing posts with label Maureen Paley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maureen Paley. Show all posts

Sunday, September 5, 2010

'MALE' AT MAUREEN PALEY, CURATED BY VINCE ALETTI




Peter Hujar, 1970s black and white photographs


Wolfgang Tillmans, necks



Tom and Clement


MALE – an exhibition curated by VINCE ALETTI
4 September — 3 October 2010
private view: Saturday 4th September 6.30 – 8.30 pm

Geoffrey Chadsey, Graham Durward, Peter Hujar, Stephen Irwin,
Patrick Lee, Attila Richard Lukacs, Paul P., Jack Pierson, Gary Schneider,
Wolfgang Tillmans, Scott Treleaven, Karlheinz Weinberger

“Male” is the latest iteration of a series of exhibitions and a book that began as—and to a great extent, remains—a personal way to understand and organise the many representations of masculinity. To some degree, that involves both engaging and undermining stereotypes: the jock, the rebel, the thug, the aesthete, the stud, the pretty boy. Not one version of masculinity, but many variations, gathered here side-by-side for a conversation, an exchange—sometimes reasoned, often heated. What do these guys have to say to one another? And to us?

For me, and for many of the artists gathered here, pictures of men are rarely neutral. Desire, with its potential for drama, always complicates things. The male gaze is often at its most intense when directed at another male, and even a casual look can be charged (Wolfgang Tillmans’ photographs of two passersby seen from the back). Whether romantic, erotic, or some messy combination of the two, the work is far from cool. It’s ardent, obsessed, freaked-out, blissed-out, sexy. Material appropriated from internet hook-up sites (Graham Durward), vintage porn (Stephen Irwin), turn-of-the-century medical records (Gary Schneider), and various, frequently pastiched, printed sources (Paul P., Geoffrey Chadsey, Attila Richard Lukacs) is re-interpreted with a mix of devilish devotion and passionate restraint. The violently disheveled boy from Jack Pierson’s “Self-Portrait” series, the stocky working man and quartet of Puerto Rican brothers who posed in Peter Hujar’s bare East Village studio, the young beauties in Scott Treleaven’s flower-strewn dreamscapes, and the proto-punk dandies Karlheinz Weinberger cultivated in postwar Zurich have nothing and everything in common.

They come together here not to define the concept of maleness but to keep the definition as open and fluid as possible. Masculinity can be a straitjacket, an armour plate, a bad joke. Or it can be loose, light, and vibrant: Something unexpected, something sweet, something wild.

Vince Aletti 2010

Vince Aletti reviews photography exhibitions for the New Yorker’s Goings on About Town section and writes a regular column about photo books for Photograph. He contributes occasional features and reviews to Aperture, Artforum, and Interview. He was the art editor of the Village Voice from 1994 to 2005, and the paper’s photo critic for 20 years. He is the winner of the International Center of Photography’s 2005 Infinity Award in writing.

Aletti wrote half of the 101 brief descriptive essays that form the backbone of Andrew Roth’s The Book of 101 Books: Seminal Photographic Books of the Twentieth Century (2001) and has written introductions to books by Michael Thompson and Ingar Krauss (both 2005), Mark Cohen and Kohei Yoshiyuki (2007), Jed Fielding and Bruce Bellas (Bruce of Los Angeles) (2008), and Ryan McGinley and Joe Szabo (2010). In March of 2002, he co-curated a show of Steven Klein’s fashion photography for the Musee de L’Elysee in Lausanne, Switzerland. Flesh Tones: 100 Years of the Nude, a show of photographs he organised, was at New York’s Robert Mann Gallery in 2003, and he was the curator of a show of work by the art director and photographer Henry Wolf at the Howard Greenberg Gallery in 2005. Male, a show of work from Aletti’s collection travelled from New York’s White Columns to Vancouver’s Presentation House in 2008, followed by the publication of Male, a book of photographs and other artwork from that collection, by Andrew Roth’s PPP Editions.

In 2009, Aletti was the adjunct curator of ICP’s Year of Fashion. During that time, he curated This Is Not a Fashion Photograph, with work from ICP’s collection, and, with Carol Squiers, co-curated Weird Beauty: Fashion Photography Now and Avedon Fashion 1944 – 2000. He and Squiers also contributed essays to the Avedon catalogue, published by Abrams. The Disco Files 1973 – 1978, a collection of Aletti’s weekly columns on disco, was published in spring 2009 by DJhistory in the UK. Aletti was one of four curators chosen for this year’s New York Photo Festival in May.

http://www.maureenpaley.com/

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

DONALD URQUHART, 'BI' AT MAUREEN PALEY AND HERALD STEET IN LONDON















It is most unusual - if not unique - to be represented by two galleries in the same city. Met with amazement and bafflement I frequently find myself having to explain this situation. Now for the first time I am exhibiting at both galleries simultaneously so here I will relate how this has come to pass.

Originally (from 2003) I was represented in London by Magnani gallery. Nicky Verber (of Herald St) worked there, and when Gregorio Magnani decided he was calling it a day Nicky left to set up Millers Terrace gallery with Ash L’ange. I showed at Millers Terrace in 2004 ("Listen To The Wine") and the same year at Maureen Paley in a group show, “The Black Album". During that show I found out I had been shortlisted for the Beck’s Futures Award. In a further twist of fate Nicky and Ash thought it was time they moved from Millers Terrace and settled at Herald Street (same street as Maureen). In that period of fast transition and high pressure it seemed practical that I have dual representation. This is an arrangement that has worked very well and it is in part a celebration of this that I am showing at both galleries in April.

I am treating this as one show in two separate spaces, not two different shows at different galleries. The title “Bi “refers to this union; a joining of two elements rather than a separation or division. The show will feature biographical works as well as an array of bitter pieces, instructional wall charts and studies in style.

I am also examining my own body of work and exploring my visual language as it has developed. My dissertation for my Scottish Certificate of Sixth Year Studies (English) was on recurring motifs and imagery in the work of Sylvia Plath. My own work has recurring themes, motifs and imagery and this is something that I thought was circumstantial, perhaps mere happenstance. Looking deeper I realise that my visual language is an expression of my response to my life; my history. From dead birds to glamorous movie stars, gore and horror, spite and sorrow; my past is present in my work.

Donald Urquhart 2010

Donald Urquhart was born in Dumfries in 1963. Previous solo exhibitions include Jack Hanley Gallery, Los Angeles and White Columns, New York, as well as Maureen Paley and Herald St in London. His work has been seen in recent group shows such as Newspeak: British Art Now, The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, 2009, 50 Moons of Saturn, The Second Turin Triennale, Turin and The Wizard of Oz, CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco, both in 2008, Das Kapital: Blue Chips and Masterpieces, Museum für Moderne Kunst, Frankfurt am Main, 2007, and in 2005 he was nominated for Beck’s Futures. A new edition of Thackeray’s Vanity Fair featuring Urquhart’s illustrations will be published by Four Corners Books in September 2010. Urquhart Lives and works in London.