
Download PDF version of Press
Release.
FAUX
NATUREL
“Faux Naturel” installation view. |
9
November 2006 - 27 January 2007 @ The Warehouse Gallery in Syracuse,
NY
7
July - 25 August 2007 @ Foreman
Art Gallery at Bishop's University in Sherbrooke, QC
Artists : Alex Da Corte, Emily Vey Duke + Cooper
Battersby,
Nick Lenker, Annie MacDonell, Allyson Mitchell, Andrea Vander Kooij
Curator : Astria Suparak
Special Events :
16 Nov 5 - 8:00pm : Exhibition reception @ TWG
17 Nov 10:00am : Artist Talk by Allyson Mitchell
7 July, 2-5pm : Exhibition reception @ FAGBU
7 July 2pm : Tour by Astria Suparak
|
Stunning
visions of larger-than-life sculpture, tragicomedic video, striking collages,
and intricate prints from artists in Philadelphia, Montréal, Syracuse,
and Toronto
| Syracuse,
NY - The Warehouse Gallery opens its first exhibition of contemporary
international art with Faux Naturel, 9
November 2006 through 27 January 2007, free to the public. Artists
will attend the reception on November 16th, from 5:00 - 8:00pm,
Th3's citywide
art night.
As citizens
of the industrialized world remain unmoved to understand how our
comfortable habits like commuting to work or having a cup of coffee
are ruining the earth and shortening the lives of innumerable beings,
the natural world shifts deeper into the category of the endangered.
Life as we know it is limited. Summers grow hotter and hurricane
season grows longer with our use of conveniences like air conditioning
and private transportation. The incidence of forest fires and mudslides
climbs in pace with our demand for cheap food and housing, which
in turn lead to irresponsible farming and logging practices. Produce
is artificially cheap because of tariffs that protect agribusiness.
Our government facilitates the intentional wasting of crops, the
bankrupting of family-run farms, and exploitative labor practices.
The
group of North American artists presented in Faux Naturel
is young enough to have grown up with a more informed sense about
the environment, with Earth Day pre-printed on calendars and global
warming existing as more than just a theory. These artists explore
the territory delineated by the destruction of the natural world,
with all its attendant themes. Entropy, redemption, apocalypse,
the fall from grace, the temptations of commercial culture, and
the relationship between science and magic all emerge as motifs
in this exhibition.
This exhibition
premiered at The Warehouse Gallery at Syracuse University in Syracuse,
New York in Fall 2006, and travelled to the Foreman Art Gallery
at Bishop's University in Sherbrooke, Quebec in Summer 2007. |
DOWNLOADS
+ PRESS:
- Postcard
- Poster
- Exhibition
images
-
Vaughan, R.M.
"Faux
Naturel: The Warehouse Gallery, Syracuse." CANADIAN
ART Magazine, Fall 2007.
Vol.24 No.3, pp136-137
- Rhodes, Nancy Keefe. "Views
of Nature: Warehouse Gallery Showcases Video Artists."
Syracuse City Eagle, 9 Nov 2006
- Rushworth, Katherine. "In
the Natural World."
The Post-Standard Stars, 3 Dec 2006
- Nourse, Nancy. "A
Queer Aesthetic." The Record. 29 June 2007: p
3
- Giguere, Elise. "Notes:
Arts Visuels." Voir.9 Aug 2007
- "Faux Naturel at The Warehouse Gallery." WAER 88.3 FM, Women's
Voices Radio, 22 Feb 2007. Interviews with Andrea Vander Kooij,
Allyson Mitchell, and Annie MacDonell |
Death and mutation have become means for betterment in the hands of
Nick Lenker and Allyson Mitchell. In CloudKill,
Lenker has given new life to a cat beyond its nine allotments, by
casting its found body into a set of ceramic multiples. Created out
of mud and reborn in the flames of a kiln, each eternally sleeping
head has been resurrected for a social fear Lenker has slain. The
unfortunate death of a stray has given Lenker a fresh, bolder existence.
CloudKill is mounted on the wall like a collection of trophies
for an underappreciated skill.
|
-
Images of past exhibitions:
- Padlock
Gallery
-Black
Floor Gallery, Philadelphia.
- Review from Fallon
and Libby's artblog.
- Flickr photo sets: 1,
2 |

A. Vander Kooij, Squirrel, (embroidery on vintage bedsheet,
2006)

A. Vander Kooij, Poisonous Mushroom, (embroidery on dish
towel, 2006)

A.
Da Corte, Damnation Wallpaper, (Cotton sateen, Vivitone
acrylic, flock, wood, 2006) |
Rather
than supporting skins from a hunter's spree, styrofoam taxidermy forms
become the seeds for a new breed of animal in Allyson Mitchell's
series of sculptures, whose individual titles combine the word “sassy”
with the animal types (e.g., Sassquirrel, Sassquog). A mix
of the synthetic and the natural, these creatures look like the result
of nuclear waste, acid rain, and artificial sweeteners. In an interview
with Kiss Machine, Mitchell explains her use of “'domestic'
materials to depict the ‘undomesticated' feral female animal as it
represents an endangered part of the human psyche.” Made of fake fur,
found textile, and reptilian glass eyes, these hot pink, rare mammals
casually display their nipples (rendered as felt flowers by the artist)
without the shame or self-consciousness that female humans learn through
social conditioning.
|
-
Artist's CV.
-
Press.
- Interview with WAER's
Women's Voices Radio. |
| There
is a sense that reality has been thwarted, that the subjects' lives
have been stilled at their most fetching moments in both Mitchell
and Annie MacDonell's works. In her Scenes from
the Vanity series, MacDonell layered old posters to depict magazine-perfect
silhouettes set amongst sutured fantasy gardens. These flawless bodies
and blossoming branches will never decay. Yet each piece of paper
the artist has incorporated attests to time's subtle corrosion, visible
in degrees of yellowing and ghostly ink bleed. |
-
Artist's
bio.
- Artist
statment.
- Interview
with WAER's
Women's Voices Radio.
- Images
from Scenes from the Vanity collage series. |
Abundance
and redemption emerge as a theme in Emily Vey Duke and Cooper
Battersby's video. Songs of Praise for the Heart Beyond
Cure ends with unexpected scenarios of hope in dire circumstances
- specifically imminent death, malicious violence, and consuming addiction.
As Sarah Milroy writes for the Globe and Mail, Duke and Battersby's
video is "anything but depressing... [it is founded in] a sense of
wonder at the endearing weirdness of life and all the vulnerable,
furry little creatures immersed in it (especially us)."
|
-
Artists'
bios.
- QuickTime
video sample.
- Script.
- Review from Canada's daily The
Globe and Mail. |
Echoing
this sentiment, Andrea Vander Kooij has created delicate
embroidered works reminiscent of botanical drawings, but with an eloquent
twist: the images reveal the skeletal structure of the critters they
depict. This simple device adds gravity to the otherwise cheery images
of a squirrel nibbling a nut and a perched bird gazing skyward. They
are reminders of our inevitable corporeal end. The vintage sheets
Vander Kooij uses as quaint backgrounds could have draped deathbeds,
but now invoke life and death simultaneously.
|
-
Artist's CV.
- Interview with WAER's
Women's Voices Radio. |
•
In Alex Da Corte's Damnation Wallpaper,
bronze figures freefall into shame, their genitalia covered by censorious
primroses. Based loosely on Michelangelo's paintings on the ceiling
of the Sistine Chapel, Da Corte's figures being cast from the Garden
of Eden tumble upside down, adorned by twenty-six colors and flocked
indigo lines. This complex silkscreen print, wrapping the majority
of the gallery's west wall, is as ornate as his colossal snake pit
in the center of the gallery, titled Thieves. In both installations
Da Corte has made the representations of sin enticing, playful,
and exquisite with dazzling colors, oversized scale, plush fabrics,
and superior craftsmanship. Da Corte's work revisits ancient Judeo-Christian
questions about the relationship between innocence, human desire,
and natural beauty.
How do we,
as privileged members of the first world, reconcile pleasure and
responsibility? How does one resist temptation when the repercussions
aren't tangible or immediate? Seemingly innocuous actions have grave
results, as is reported nightly in the news. Is nature naïve
to our viciousness, or forgiving of our filthy ways? How many times
can the earth lick its wounds before lashing back?
With the addition of a new sound at its head, the French phrase
au naturel becomes a strange twist on its original meaning.
It is no longer naked, plain, unadulterated, without artificial
ingredients. Faux naturel is translated as “fake naturalness”:
Having the appearance of genuineness, with, perhaps, intent to deceive
or an inability to remain true. It may evoke a dreadlocked, barefoot
hippie perfumed by Chanel, or an amusement park log ride made of
molded plastic bark. Faux Naturel is the
title of this exhibition, used without the stigma of insincerity.
There is an authenticity in these artists' practices, stripped of
trendy cynicism. Many of the works draw from personal stories—sublimations
of painful experiences reclaimed and reshaped into something beautiful
and heartfelt, with the power to transform.
In this contaminated atmosphere, artists in cities pine for the
untainted innocence of nature, understand mortality more profoundly,
and envision a stronger species.
- Astria Suparak, Director
Faux Naturel showcases work never before exhibited in New
York by emerging international artists. The works installed for
the unique dimensions of The Warehouse Gallery are Lenker's CloudKill,
Duke and Battersby's Rest for the Wicked, Da Corte's Thieves
and Damnation Wallpaper. |
-
Artist's
bio.
Images of past exhibitions:
- Space
1026 (sokref1's
Flickr photos), Philadelphia
- Black
Floor Gallery, Philadelphia.
Reviews:
- Fallon
and Libby's artblog
- Art in
the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.
- The New York Times Magazine, Liberal
Arts in Philadelphia |
# # #
FAUX
NATUREL
Faux Naturel installation view at Foreman Art Gallery at Bishop's
University |
7
July - 25 August 2007 / Tues - Sat, 12-5pm
Artists :
Alex Da Corte, Emily Vey Duke + Cooper Battersby, Nick Lenker, Annie
MacDonell, Allyson Mitchell, Andrea Vander Kooij
Reception : 7 July,
2-5pm
Lecture : 7 July 2pm
Astria Suparak, Curator and Director of The Warehouse Gallery in
Syracuse, NY
@ Foreman
Art Gallery at Bishop's University
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada
|
DECEIT,
NATURE, TEMPTATION
| As
citizens of the industrialized world remain unmoved to understand
how our comfortable habits like commuting to work or having a cup
of coffee are ruining the earth and shortening the lives of innumerable
beings, the natural world shifts deeper into the category of the
endangered. Life as we know it is limited. Summers grow hotter and
hurricane season grows longer with our use of conveniences like
air conditioning and private transportation. The incidence of forest
fires and mudslides climbs in pace with our demand for cheap food
and housing, which in turn lead to irresponsible farming and logging
practices. Produce is artificially cheap because of tariffs that
protect agribusiness. Our government facilitates the intentional
wasting of crops, the bankrupting of family-run farms, and exploitative
labor practices.
The
group of North American artists presented in Faux Naturel
is young enough to have grown up with a more informed sense about
the environment, with Earth Day pre-printed on calendars and global
warming existing as more than just a theory. These artists explore
the territory delineated by the destruction of the natural world,
with all its attendant themes. Entropy, redemption, apocalypse,
the fall from grace, the temptations of commercial culture, and
the relationship between science and magic all emerge as motifs
in this exhibition.
This exhibition
premiered at The Warehouse Gallery in Syracuse in Fall 2006.
The
Warehouse Gallery at Syracuse University exhibits and commissions
work by emerging and accomplished artists whose work engages the
community in a dialogue regarding the role the arts can play in
illuminating critical issues.
The Foreman Art Gallery of Bishop's University
is committed to art presentation and discourse, as well as the exploration
of diversity of culture. |
DOWNLOADS
+ PRESS:
- View exhibition postcard
at The Warehouse Gallery.
- Download exhibition poster
at Foreman Art Gallery.
- Rhodes, Nancy Keefe. "Views
of Nature: Warehouse Gallery Showcases Video Artists."
Syracuse City Eagle, 9 Nov 2006
- Rushworth, Katherine. "In
the Natural World."
The
Post-Standard Stars, 3 Dec 2006
- "Embracing Winter at The Warehouse Gallery." WAER 88.3 FM, Women's
Voices Radio, 22 Feb 2007. Interviews with Andrea Vander Kooij,
Allyson Mitchell, and Annie MacDonell |
#
# #
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