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Gallery 1
RACHEL
NIFFENEGGER & PAUL NUDD
images | Press: Chicago
Tribune | New
American Paintings | Flavorpill
| Art
Letter
RACHEL
NIFFENEGGER and PAUL NUDD traffic in
arresting and grotesque imagery, depicting the body in ridiculous
levels of distress. Though their goals differ -- Niffenegger’s
heads and body parts suffer damages from external sources; Nudd’s
figures seem diseased, comically so, from within -- both artists
wrestle an indelible, even beautiful power from repulsive and
revolting sources and materials.
Rachel Niffenegger’s sculptures and paintings
transcribe the figure in transitional states: between being and
ghost image; statuesque and the formless; two-dimensional and
three-dimensional spaces. Her effigies are created, manipulated
and destroyed through ritual; torsos are cracked, propped up and
covered, faces are absorbed and imbedded in cloth, and paint is
picked off and reapplied to appendages. These objects are material
gestures of the psyche fulfilling the necessity to make solid
objects as a permeable and porous body. Materials travel between
objects and are generated through discarded works as she employs
spray-painted polystyrene, sawdust, concrete, ash, hair, plaster,
and paint skins.
Paul Nudd’s new large vertical drawings
depict cartoonishly terrifying mutants, alien/human mash-ups besotted
with tumors, warts, lesions, growths, male and female genitalia
and mis-placed pubic hair. The slightly-larger than human full-body
portraits feel like amalgamated bastard spawn of Nudd’s
gross-out heroes and influences: Paul McCarthy, Öyvind Fahlström,
Peter Saul, Ivan Albright and of course, Jim Nutt, along with
popular sources, movies like “The Fly”, “Dead
Alive”, “The Toxic Avenger” and The Thing from
the Fantastic Four. Nudd’s hermaphroditic figures (“Most
of the action goes on between the legs”, per the artist)
map bizarre physical characteristics with green being a prevalent
color, representing life, growth, bacteria, mold, fungus and monsters,
Frankenstein and the Hulk. These radioactive icons find redemption
in disease, being self-aware bodies in a paranoid age, reveling
in genetic mutations, bad pharmaceuticals and environmental degradation.
Chicago Magazine named Rachel
Niffenegger Chicago’s best emerging artist
in 2010 and New City named her one of “Chicago’s Next
Generation of Image Makers” in 2010, this after naming her
the “Best Painter Under 25” in 2009. She currently
has work in Seeing is a Kind of Thinking: A Jim Nutt Companion,
Museum of Contemporary Art, in Chicago and has been included in
exhibitions at Ceri Hand Gallery in Liverpool, England and in
Chicago at Corbett vs. Dempsey, the Sullivan Galleries at SAIC,
The Post Family, and the Hyde Park Art Center. Niffenegger, born
in Evanston in 1985, received her BFA from the School of the Art
Institute of Chicago and is currently an MFA candidate at Northwestern
University in Evanston, Illinois.
Paul Nudd
currently has a large mutant drawing in Seeing is a Kind of Thinking:
A Jim Nutt Companion, Museum of Contemporary Art, in Chicago and
has been included in exhibitions in New York, Dusseldorf, Kansas
City and Chicago. Abraham Ritchie, writing in ArtSlant called
his recent curatorial effort, “Heads on Poles”, organized
with Scott Wolniak, “the Inadvertant Chicago Biennial”.
His prodigious zine work can be found in several national artist
book collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York;
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Microsoft, Seattle; National
Academy of Design, New York; Indiana University and School of
the Art Institute of Chicago. Paul Nudd, born in 1976 in Harpenden,
England and received his MFA from the University of Illinois-Chicago
in 2001. He lives and works in Berwyn, Illinois.

Rachel Niffenegger
Shroud (Anemone Eye)
2011
Watercolor, acrylic, spray-paint, plaster and mixed media on fabric
on paper
26" x 18"

Paul
Nudd
Dr. Sourmoles
2010
Ink, watercolor, colored pencil, gouache, acrylic, pencil on paper
89" H x 42" W
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