Alicja Kwade: I Rise Again, Changed But The Same, 07 May 2016 — 30 Jun 2016
Exhibitions

Alicja Kwade: I Rise Again, Changed But The Same

303 Gallery, 555 W 21st Street

303 Gallery announces the first solo exhibition with Alicja Kwade, the gallery’s inaugural exhibition at its new home at 555 West 21st Street.

Using sculpture as a means to tap into the most elemental questions of human sensibility, Kwade’s work proposes structures for probing the concentric systems of perception that constitute reality. Often utilizing natural or everyday objects as real-world tethers to the extended concept of materiality set forth by her installations, she reopens the locked doors of scientific, religious, and philosophical models accepted as social agreements and universal truths.

Kwade will exhibit sculptures she refers to as “paravents,” works that cut and redouble space in combination with sculptural components. In these pieces, panels of glass and double mirror become sites of transference, physical markers of the points at which objects begin to inhabit their objecthood as well as distance themselves from it phenomenologically. As found objects and their reverse facsimiles hover between image space and physical space, a dialectical tension vibrates the barriers between them, each object encroaching on the other’s supposedly impermeable reality. Suddenly everything is possible, reality becomes both infinite and non-existent. These suggestions of simultaneous parallel worlds unseat perceived reality from the set of rules governing it, reterritorializing the primitive urge to be confounded.

A sculpture hanging from the gallery’s ceiling consists of bronze rings twisted into the shapes of border markers between the Earth’s time zones and conjoined coaxially; the world in a perpetual 24-hour loop. Meanwhile, along the gallery’s walls, sheets of coated mirror begin to adopt the characteristics of identicalsized sheets of rusted steel. Decay bleeds through the ether from one material to the next, dematerialized. Paradoxically summoning alternate realities in the same space at different moments, an illusory glimpse of entropy in process is formed. In a similar gambit, a brass ring floor sculpture envisions the fleeting forms of a circle spinning on its own edge. Rendered with a Muybridgean simultaneity, it encompasses nuclear shapes, seeds of frozen continuance. The work grasps for visual patterns in the structure of time, positing forms born in nature, explained in science, and processed through an uncanny metaphysical ability to reduce the irreducible.

This type of speculative realism is central to the thought of Graham Harman, the leading proponent of a destabilizing school of thought known as object-oriented ontology. In Prince of Networks, Harman refers to Eidos, the logical structure of any culture, as a situation in which “the sensual object exists in a duel with its real qualities.” Confronted with stimuli from far-reaching origins that travel imperceptibly through human consciousness, a structural network of this type of object-rationalization emerges and standardizes social reality. Kwade’s disruption of this network has at its root a unique method of distending the space around a thing, ensuring that it simultaneously inhabits its own ‘thingness’ more fully as well as pointing to the impossibility of a thing as a static concept. Her work opens zones for contemplation, spaces where subjective reality is dilated into an unknowable beyond.

Contacts & Details
OPENING:
tue, wed, thu, fri, sat, sun 10:00 am – 6:00 pm

CLOSING DAYS:
mon

T: +1 (212) 255 1121
M: info@303gallery.com
Website

ADDRESS
303 Gallery, 555 W 21st Street

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