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Western
Exhibitions is thrilled to present a new video by Josh
Mannis in Gallery 2 in a solo show that will run from
September 7 to October 20, 2012, with an opening reception September
7th from 5-8 pm. Gallery hours are Wednesday through Saturday,
11am to 6pm and by appointment.
In
Fashion, Mannis performs a repetitive dance to a house music
soundtrack wearing a black short sleeve shirt, a pair of Dockers,
a windbreaker and a mask. The homemade costume is used as a prop
with which, and a space within which choreography are improvised,
refined and re-presented. The image of the performance is copied
and layered several times over so that several dancers populate
the screen in staggered succession; altogether creating varied
graphic effects on an all-black background.
In
a review of his recent show at Anthony Greaney Gallery in Artforum,
Nuit Banai writes:
…
Mannis is most impressive in his video work, through which he
embraces the simulacral as the very condition of the creative
act. . Mannis uses irreverent pastiche to reprocess the ciphers
of contemporary experience and carve out an original image zone
where new rules might yet be formulated. Yet he is also acutely
aware that in an era when "acting out" is a democratic
prerogative facilitated by such distribution platforms as You
Tube and Tumblr, the gallery still functions as "the law"
by sanctioning the name of art.
Josh
Mannis’ solo show at Anthony Greaney Gallery, Boston, MA,
in spring 2012 was reviewed in Artforum, Art Papers
and The Boston Globe. Solo exhibitions include Variations,
Thomas Solomon Gallery, Los Angeles (2010); Dawn of Man,
40000, Chicago (2006) and Iron Eagle, Small A Projects,
Portland, OR (2006). Mannis was included in No Soul for Sale,
with the Suburban (Oak Park, IL) and Milwaukee International (Milwaukee,
WI) at the Tate Modern, London (2010); Sympathy for the Devil:
Art and Rock & Roll Since 1967, Museum of Contemporary
Art, Chicago, (traveling 2007-09) and For Those About to Rock,
the Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh (2005). He received his MFA from
the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2005. Mannis lives
and works in Los Angeles, California. |