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February
20 - March 28, 2009
In
Gallery 1
ADRIANE HERMAN
Human Doings
images
| reviews
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In
Gallery 2
Prints
from
FRESH HOT PRESS
images
| reviews: New
City
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Adriane
Herman
Miller & Shellabarger
John Neff |
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On
Friday, February 20, 2009, Western Exhibition opens two new shows:
In Gallery 1, we present a solo exhibition by Adriane
Herman and in Gallery 2, a group show of new prints from
Fresh Hot Press, a Madison, Wisconsin-based printmaking
shop. Both shows open with a public reception from 5 to 8pm.
The shows will run from February 20 - March 28, 2009.
For decades, Adriane Herman has instinctively
archived minutiae that others would likely toss out without a
thought or, perhaps more likely, never let accumulate in the first
place. For her third show at Western Exhibitions, Herman will
present a series of inlaid burnishing clay tablets that take their
inspiration from other people’s “to do” lists.
These wall-mounted tablets have surfaces that are extraordinary
in every sense of the word – shiny, sensuous, even sublime.
To make these works, Herman transposes a larger reproduction of
her source image (a “to do” list) to a wooden board
coated with 20 thin layers of burnishing clay. She carves out
the text and fills it in with thin layers of an opposing color
of clay. Next, she sands, polishes and burnishes the top layer
of clay until the text/image is revealed, a laborious and time-consuming
process whose resulting shine, that sublime surface, is all elbow
grease – no varnishes or coatings. It has to be seen in
person to be truly appreciated.
Nadine Wasserman, an independent critic and curator, aptly describes
Herman’s intentions in an essay for the show “Ruminant”
held at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Portland, Maine:
Adriane
Herman takes items that would normally be discarded and transforms
them. Herman has collected an archive of other people’s
shopping and “to do” lists as a way to ascertain
human action and intention and to reveal the human compulsion
for order. List-making is often a coping mechanism and a way
to organize an otherwise chaotic world. By recreating these
lists in a more permanent and labor-intensive medium, Herman
makes them monumental. Like a forger, she copies the look of
the list as closely as possible into a clay medium and then
burnishes the surface into a fine polish. In this way, they
are transformed into culturally significant artifacts. Each
list reveals individual characteristics about its anonymous
writer. Some are neat, others are messy. While many of them
list food items, some are statements of intention: “Get
colored yarn. Only wool, no acrylic,” “earn the
resources to finish house and pay off debt,” or “Lunch,
check-in, nap, movie, dinner, drinks, sex, breakfast.”
One particular list even has corrected spelling. Unlike more
public documents, these bits of scrap paper exhibit inventories
that were never intended for anyone but the writer. By monumentalizing
this mundane activity, Herman shows us a raw and unrefined version
of our own transient objectives.
Adriane
Herman’s recent solo shows include the Ulrich Museum
of Art in Wichita, Kansas and the Center for Maine Contemporary
Art in Rockport, Maine. She has been included in group shows at
the International Print Center in New York City, Adam Baumgold
Gallery in NYC, Lump Gallery in North Carolina, the Portland Museum
of Art in Maine and the Corcoran Museum of Art in Washington,
DC, among several others. Her work is in the permanent collections
of the Whitney Museum of Art, Adobe Systems in San Francisco,
Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, the Herbert F Johnson Museum of
American Art in Ithaca, New York, the Progressive Corporation
in Cleveland, and several other collections. Herman lives and
works in Portland, Maine. See her work here.
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In
Gallery 2, Western Exhibitions presents three new prints by gallery
artists, Adriane Herman, Miller &
Shellabarger and John Neff produced
at the printmaking studio Fresh
Hot Press in Madison, Wisconsin. Fresh Hot Press
publishes small editions and unique prints in collaboration with
visiting artists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison Art Department.
During the fall semester of 2008, Fresh Hot Press invited these
three alumni of the UW Art Department to print editions, in conjunction
with Western Exhibition’s show at The
Project Lodge in Madison. Adriane Herman, Miller & Shellabarger,
and John Neff each brought unique conceptual approaches to printmaking,
but interestingly, all three produced work with a distinct concern
for subtleties in the print’s surface. Each piece encourages
an intimate experience of its topography and an appreciation of
the inimitable qualities of a hand-pulled print.
Adriane Herman’s print, “Necco
Census No. 1: Scratch-Off, Scratch 'N Sniff Alignment”,
a silkscreen with hand cutting and perforation, is literally a
scratch 'n sniff piece printed from a solution that matched the
fragrances of Necco wafer’s eight flavors mixed in same
proportion as they appeared in the pack. This print was featured
in the exhibition “New
Prints 2008/Autumn” at the International Print Center
New York.
She also made the prints "Checklist" and "Checklist
Deluxe" at Fresh Hot Press, re-producing a list she found
at the Maine College of Art made by a beginning art student, a
list of all the things one needs to include in order to make good
art. Herman figured if she made a print from it, it would automatically
be good art since it inherently contains all the items on the
list.
Miller & Shellabarger have embossed a silhouette
of themselves with their beards tied together to make their striking,
black-on-black untitled print. This piece is a continuation of
their Conjoined Silhouette series, which typically take the form
of black cut paper silhouettes mounted on white paper. This body
of work was mostly recently seen in a solo presentation by Western
Exhibitions at the NADA Art Fair in Miami this December.
John Neff’s screenprint, “Vexations”,
representing the score of Erik Satie’s infamous 20-plus
hour piano composition “Vexations”, has 840 layers
of ink on the paper’s surface. “Vexations”,
as conceived by Satie, is a short chordal passage and a bass line
which is repeated twice in each repetition of the piece, to be
repeated 840 times, thus Neff’s correlation of 840 layers
of ink. Western Exhibitions will also show this print as part
of its solo presentation of Neff’s work at The Armory Show
in New York City in March.
Fresh Hot Press is the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s
student-run print club dedicated to promoting student, faculty,
and community involvement in all forms of print media. In addition
to organizing exhibitions of student work, they regularly host
and print editions with regional and national artists. They not
only aim to maintain UW’s involvement in the national printmaking
community, but to share resources and generate interest in print
media at a local level.
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