I Am Silver JUSTIN VIVIAN BOND
CHELSEA CULPRIT
ANNA GLANTZ
KIKI KOGELNIK
BECKY KOLSRUD
SOJOURNER TRUTH PARSONS
26 June 2016 - 29 July 2016
Sojourner Truth Parsons, The same rope that pulls you will hang you his and hers edition I, 2016, collaged canvas, acrylic, sand and glitter, 72 x 72 in.
I Am Silver, 2016, installation view, Foxy Production, New York
I Am Silver, 2016, installation view, Foxy Production, New York
Justin Vivian Bond, Mussed in the Wind, 2013, oil on canvas, watercolor on archival paper, 14.57 x 11.42 in.
Justin Vivian Bond, My Barbie Coloring Book, 2014, watercolor on archival paper, 14.57 x 11.42 in.
Chelsea Culprit, Watermelon Crawl, 2016, acrylic, crayon, graphite, oil, oil pastel, 60 x 45 3/4 in.
I Am Silver, 2016, installation view, Foxy Production, New York
Becky Kolsrud, Blue Eye/Red Eye, 2016, oil paint and pastel on canvas, 24 x 20 in.
Anna Glantz, Sphinx, 2016, oil paint on canvas, 56 x 66 in.
Becky Kolsrud, Double Portrait, 2014, oil on wood, 18 x 12 in.
I Am Silver, 2016, installation view, Foxy Production, New York
I Am Silver, 2016, installation view, Foxy Production, New York
Chelsea Culprit, Solita, 2016, acrylic, crayon, graphite, oil, oil pastel on canvas drop cloth, 60 x 54 in.
Kiki Kogelnik, Untitled (Still life with hands), 1966, oil and acrylic on canvas, 28 x 22 in.
Kiki Kogelnik, Untitled, c., 1972, oil and acrylic on canvas, 10 x 10 1/8 in.
Chelsea Culprit, Genie, 2016, acrylic, crayon, graphite, oil, oil pastel on canvas drop cloth, 40 x 31 in.
I Am Silver, 2016, installation view, Foxy Production, New York
Anna Glantz, Two by two, 2016, oil on canvas, 56 x 66 in.
Becky Kolsrud, And Nails, 2016, oil paint and plastisol on canvas, 30 x 24 in.
Kiki Kogelnik, Robots, 1966, acrylic and pencil on paper, 19 11/16 x 25 5/8 in.

I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions.
Whatever I see I swallow immediately
Just as it is, unmisted by love or dislike.
I am not cruel, only truthful‚
The eye of a little god, four-cornered.

From Mirror (1961) by Sylvia Plath.

Plath’s poem takes a mirror’s point of view as it encounters a woman as she transforms over the years. The poet captures the mirror’s neutrality and the pain it causes its subject. Her angst and despair are the obverse of Narcissus’ pleasure in his own image, and a counter-narrative to psychoanalytic theories about identity forming through an idealized reflected image.

I Am Silver comprises portraits that involve refraction, doubling, and detachment. In some works, arms, legs, hands, or mouths are freed from bodies; in others, characters appear unmoored from conventional definition, as if their personas have been launched into a symbolic realm that is at once familiar, disruptive, and dramatic. Collective cultural memories fill spaces where the self has been abstracted, fractured, or fragmented.

Justin Vivian Bond’s watercolor diptychs pair the artist with the 1970s and ‘80s model Karen Graham. The double portraits are almost, but not quite, mirror images of one another. For the teenage Bond, Graham, as the face of Estée Lauder cosmetics, was an ideal figure that was, nevertheless, deeply implicated within the aspirational ploys of advertising. The works’ near-doublings express transformational desire and poignantly underline the difference between star and fan, between an ideal and an evolving self.

Chelsea Culprit’s figures seem to be in the throes of transformation and disjunction. Like palimpsests, they appear upon layers of white worn canvases that started life as drop cloths on her studio floor. Watermelon Crawl has a cartoon-like single arm with two hands, one green with colored nails like a female Grinch, and the other in shades of pink; between them float a pair of purple lips. Genie has a similar structure, except that one hand holds a smoking cigar, and that here image and background compete with one another in terms of color and definition. Solita also has a tension between its figure and the field it appears upon: a line-drawn, semi-naked woman seems constrained into the work’s frame, her body is a map of actions from the artist’s studio.

Anna Glantz’s paintings use a variety archetypes and visual registers to explore cultural memory. In Sphinx, the upper body of a man looks upwards, in the darkness, toward a series of trumpet-shapes, while a green planet or star shines in the distance. With echoes of Magritte, the painting is also reminiscent of a 1970s science fiction book-cover or a Tarkovsky film poster. Two By Two, which has a more illustrative style, mixes popular American historical references from Paul Revere to the noble hobo. The images overlay a Turneresque background of subtly colored luminescence, while they are overlaid upon in turn by colored clovers that seem to have sprung from a greeting card.

Becky Kolsrud’s portraits project and refract popular representations of women. Her two works on canvas recall pulp fiction covers: beguiling women peer out from behind screens. The subjects’ eyes are variously colored or dizzyingly doubled. As if seen through a prism, Double Portrait depicts a glamorous woman whose face turns within herself 

Kiki Kogelnik moved through abstraction and Pop to produce a unique take upon the representation of the body. A small portrait in vibrant colors from 1972 has a highly- stylized, other-worldly sensibility. A drawing and a painting, both from 1966, combine fragmented body parts and series of patterning: the former, Robots, has sets of legs connected by colorful orbs and lines of dots that appear to form a profile; the latter, Untitled (Still life with hands), has an air of communal jubilation: hands energetically project upwards toward sets of radiant circles.

Sojourner Truth Parsons’ paintings of mysterious women, like Holbein portraits, include assorted objects that tell the subject’s story, except her stories remain tantalizingly ambiguous. Her large work in the exhibition comprises a white hound, an ornate table, what may be upended cups and vases, and a pink, nude woman who has an arm and a foot blocked out by a black background. Areas of differently applied paint and patterned collaging intensify the work’s sense of a fragmented, enigmatic identity.

Justin Vivian Bond (Hagerstown, MD, 1963) lives and works in New York City. Bond studied theater at Adelphi University in Long Island, NY. Selected solo exhibitions include: Fall of the House of Whimsy, Participant, New York, NY (2011); Gold Mesh Cross-Body Bag, Art Market Provincetown, Provincetown, MA (2014); My Model / MySelf, Vitrine, London, England (2015). A selection of Bond’s films include: John Cameron Mitchell’s Shortbus (2006), Sunset Stories (2012), Imaginary Heroes (2004) and Fanci’s Persuasion (1995).

Chelsea Culprit currently lives and works in Mexico City, Mexico. She holds a BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Solo exhibitions include: Blessed with a Job, Queer Thoughts, New York, NY (2016); Cloud Illusions | Recall, Born Nude, Chicago, IL (2015); In The Flesh, Important Projects, Oakland, CA (2014). Selected group exhibitions include: Sabádo, X Bienal de Nicaragua, Leon, Nicaragua; Opals, Galleri Opdahl, Stavanger, Norway (both 2016).

Anna Glantz (Concord, MA, 1989) lives and works in Queens, NY. She holds a BA in Art and Linguistics from University of California, Los Angeles, and an MFA in Visual Art from Columbia University, New York, NY. Selected exhibitions include: Intimisms, James Cohan, New York, NY, (forthcoming); Surface Tension, Simon Subal Gallery, New York, NY (2016); Horse in the Road, Topless, Rockaway Beach, NY (2015).

Kiki Kogelnik (1935 – 1997) was an Austrian artist who lived and worked in New York City and Vienna. Kogelnik studied at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna. In 1961 she relocated to New York City. Recent exhibitions include Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark (2016); MUMOK, Vienna, Austria (2016); König Galerie, Berlin, Germany (2016) (solo); Tate Modern, London, UK (2015); Modern Art Oxford, Oxford, UK (2015) (solo); Barbican Center, London, UK (2015); Simone Subal Gallery, New York (2014) (solo); Kunstverein Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany (2013) (solo); Moderna Museet, Stockholm, Sweden (2013); Kunsthalle Wien, Vienna, Austria (2011). Upcoming exhibitions include Kunsthall Stavanger, Stavanger, Norway (2017) (solo).

Becky Kolsrud (Los Angeles, CA, 1984) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA. She holds a BS from New York University and a MFA from University of California, Los Angeles. Selected exhibitions include: Imagine, Brand New Gallery, Milan, Italy (2016); In The Matterhorn, Phil Gallery, Los Angeles, CA (2015); and We Alter and Repair, JTT, New York, NY (2014).

Sojourner Truth Parsons (Vancouver, Canada, 1984) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA. She holds a BFA from Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. Selected exhibitions include: Heartbeats Accelerating, Tomorrow Gallery, New York, NY (solo) (2016); I Got Allergies, Phil Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; and Hotter than July 24th, Simon Cooper Cole, Toronto, Canada (both 2015).

CREDITS
Installation photography: Mark Woods.