Through the Rabbit Hole
Sleights of Scale and Flights of Fantasy
November 2006 – June 2007
street level gallery
" 'What a curious feeling,' said Alice, 'I must be shutting up like a telescope.'
"
Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland
"In the dream of the man that dreamed, the dreamed one awoke."
Jorge Luis Borges, The Circular Ruins
The surrealistic sphere where the artistic imagination slides and seeps into reality
is the tantalizing territory explored in this exhibition. Following the example
of Lewis Carroll’s famous heroine, we fall into a dream and through a rabbit
hole, entering a topsy-turvy world where logical expectations of scale are dramatically
altered, and where fantastical elements—the inhabitants, architecture, or
topography—invite us to examine the nature of dreams and myths, both individual
and communal, born of our sleeping and our waking. In this exhibition, dreamscapes
replace landscapes. From enchanted wintry scenes captured in photographs and within
snow globes, to the endless, miniature library where a projected figure holds a
book, to a gold-brick floor, to an ink-drawn panoply of fairy–tale creatures,
to figures who scale a cathedral, ride reindeer, or come to illusory life as cowboys,
secretive scientists, and more, these works belong to the realm of fantasy.
Another hallmark of the works in this exhibition is an emphasis on the process of
art–making, of the artist’s hand at work. Traditional media are validated
and updated here in works such as Laura Ball’s watercolors of people at play
and in conflict atop animals, Julie Nord’s Wonderland–like
pen–and–pencil drawing, and Dylan Graham’s nearly encyclopedic
vision of New York City, made as a paper cut–out, and others. Stephan Balkenhol’s
Man on Cathedral is sculpted from a single block of wood in a rough–hewn
style that alludes to the traditions and tales of folklore. And James Croak’s
Nymph, who scales the ceiling looking like a survivor from another civilization,
is cast in dirt, a most ancient, common, and resonant material.
The intricate, miniature worlds within Charles Matton’s Public Library,
as well as those in Lori Nix’s Ice Storm photograph, and
those in Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz’s cibachromes and snow globes are
constructed, molded, or cast by hand. Martin and Munoz’s figurines, however,
are store bought, as are the cowboys in David Levinthal’s dramatically lit
images of the American mythology of the Wild West. Celebrated photographer
Loretta Lux is also a painter: the bucolic backgrounds of her Renaissance-style
portraits are actually photographs of Lux’s paintings, digitally combined
with the head shots of her subject. Even Jennifer and Kevin McCoy’s video
work is crafted in part by hand: using plastic figures and other small props, they
build the sets of their youthful career aspirations, then place several cameras
on each “scene,” which are then projected as video. This multi-layered
process underscores the artists’ excavation of the development of self-image:
fantasies of who we are or could be are often introduced and reinforced by the media
without any critical context or basis in reality.
Art merges with consciousness and desire in works such as Aleksandra Mir’s
Umbrella Project, for which the artist crafted an oversized umbrella and
photographed it in different locales, intervening in daily, pedestrian life with
her functional artwork. Pavel Braila’s Barons’ Hill project
presents a profound intersection of art, life, and longing: the elaborate, ornate
architecture of the buildings shown in these photographs are the facades of houses
built by the Roma people of Soroca, Moldova. The houses themselves lack basic necessities,
and are rarely lived in, used only to entertain and to fulfill the fantasies of
a nomadic people dreaming of prosperity, acceptance, and respect. Braila’s
gold-brick floor functions as both symbol of and homage to their aspirations; to
walk on them is to participate in the realization of this multi–layered fantasy.
Fairy tales are characterized by their potent combination of the charming, the fantastic,
and the uncanny, and many of the dreamscapes featured here fulfill the requirements
of this genre. The imagery is both enchanting and enchanted, and the suggested narratives
often include the potential for disaster to strike. Perhaps the most uncanny is
the poetic paradox present in Martin and Munoz’s works: as viewers we are
outside, looking inside the sculpture or photograph at being outside, all the while
absorbing a vision born within the artists’ minds. A similar paradox applies
to Matton’s library with the lone girl: if we identify with any of these figures,
we may truly experience the uncanny. A story by the Argentine writer Jorge Luis
Borges describes the experience of a man who dreams another into existence only
to realize he, too, is merely the product of someone’s dream. The fairy-tale
realms created by Martin and Munoz, Matton, and others suggest a related, complex
circuitry of perspectives between artist, viewer, and artwork. To navigate The Rabbit
Hole is to enter these labyrinths of artistic imagination and travel toward
a center where the constructed opposition of fantasy and reality, of the dreamer
and the dreamed, disappear into illuminating visions.
— Alice Gray Stites
Alice Gray Stites is an independent curator living in Louisville. She has organized
exhibitions at the Speed Art Museum, the University of Kentucky Art Museum, and
21C MuseumHotel, where she curated the inaugural exhibition, “Hybridity: The
Evolution of Species and Spaces in 21st–Century Art.”
Current List of Works
- Laura Ball (American), Confrontation, 2005. Watercolor
on paper.
- Laura Ball (American), Embroilment, 2006. Watercolor on
paper.
- Laura Ball (American), Evolution, 2006. Watercolor on
paper.
- Stephan Balkenhol (German), Mann auf Katedrale (Man on Cathedral),
1996. Wood and paint.
- Pavel Braila (Moldovan), Barons’ Hill Floor (Detail),
2004. Cast brass and wood ingots.
- Pavel Braila (Moldovan), Baron’s Hill, 2004. C-print.
Courtesy of the artist and Yvon Lambert Gallery, New York.
- Michael Combs (American), Good Glory, 2006. Carved wood
and paint.
- James Croak (American), Nymph, 2001-5. Cast dirt and rope.
- Alain Declerq (French), Safe, 2006. Safe with digital
opening, latex base.
- Johnston Foster (American), The Fowl Play, 2004.Mixed
media on wood.
- Dylan Graham (Dutch, born in New Zealnd), Mannah Atin,
2006. Paper cut-out.
- David Herbert (American), Imagine, 2005. Plywood, Styrofoam,
string, latex, and paint.
- David Herbert (American), Bohemian Rhapsody, 2005. DVD,
running time 7 minutes.
- David Herbert (American), Iron Man, 2005. DVD, running
time 6 minutes.
- David Herbert (American), Ziggy Stardust, 2005. DVD, running
time, 3 minutes, 50 seconds.
- Matt Johnson (American), Life’s A Beach, 2003. Mixed
media.
- Ned Kahn (American), Aeolian Landscape ,2005. Mixed media
table installation.
- David Levinthal (American), Untitled (Wild West Series),
2000. Polaroid.
- David Levinthal (American), Untitled (Wild West Series),
2000. Polaroid. Courtesy of the artist.
- Loretta Lux (German), Portrait of a Girl #1, 2000. Ilfochrome
print.
- Loretta Lux (German), Portrait of a Girl #2, 2000. Ilfochrome
print.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish) Traveler
122 At Night, 2004. C-print.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish), Traveler
186 at Night, 2006. C-print. Courtesy of the artists and PPOW Gallery, New
York.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish), Traveler
170 At Night, 2006. C-print. Courtesy of the artists and PPOW Gallery, New
York.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish), The Labyrinth,
2004. C-print. Courtesy of the artists and PPOW Gallery, New York.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish), Traveler
81, 2003. Mixed media: glass, water, wood, and plastic.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish), Traveler
LXXXI, 2003. Mixed media: glass, water, wood, and plastic.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish), Traveler
190, 2006. Mixed media: glass, water, wood, and plastic. Courtesy of the artists
and PPOW Gallery, New York.
- Walter Martin and Paloma Munoz (American, Spanish), You Cannot
Tell the Keeping from the Kept, 2000. Mixed media.
- Charles Matton (French), Public Library, 2004. Mixed media
box construction.
- Jennifer and Kevin McCoy (American), Double Fantasy III (dream
jobs), 2006. Mixed media video installation.
- Aleksandra Mir (Swedish, born in Poland), The Big Umbrella
(Paris series), 2003. Mixed media.
- Aleksandra Mir (Swedish, born in Poland), Untitled (The Big
Umbrella ,Paris series), 2003. C-print.
- Aleksandra Mir (Swedish, born in Poland), Untitled (The Big
Umbrella ,Paris series), 2003. C-print.
- Aleksandra Mir (Polish), Untitled (The Big Umbrella ,Paris
series), 2003. C-print.
- Nic Nicosia (American), Untitled 2002 #6, 2002. C-print.
- Lori Nix (American), Ice Storm (Accidentally Kansas),
2004. C-print
- Julie Nord (Danish), Impending Doom, 2005. Felt pen, posca
pen, pencil on paper.
- Randall Sellers (American), Untitled (Aerial Landscape),
2005. Graphite on paper.
- Johan Thurfjell (Swedish), The Mines, 2006. Plywood, lamps,
mixed media.
- Yoram Wolberger (Israeli), Stuffed Musical Toys, 1999-2000.
Fabric, wires, filter board, speakers, and batteries, dimensions variable.
Life as Art: Live Art Installation
Lauren Argo
June 4 – 24, 2006
enclosed window space at 21c Museum Hotel’s restaurant, Proof on Main
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exhibition details
Mikhail Baryshnikov
Dominican Moves
August 3 – November 2007
gallery street level
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exhibition details
Blue Apple Players:
an exhibition of tableaux vivants
May 13 - July 31, 2008
gallery 3
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exhibition details
Ballads of the Barefoot Mind
Daniel Dutton
October 2006 – January 6, 2007
atrium gallery
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exhibition details
Dia de los Muertos: Day of the Dead
Saturday, November 1 to Sunday, November 9
gallery 4, off the street level gallery
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Marvin Francis: Prison’s Paper Trail
August – January 2008
gallery 4 street level
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Anthony Goicolea
Ramp
November 2007 – January 2008
street level gallery
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Ilse Haider: Selected Works 1997-2002
March 13 – August 3, 2007
gallery 4 street level
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exhibition details
Hybridity
The Evolution of Species and Spaces
in 21st-Century Art
April – September 2006
street level gallery
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exhibition details
Past Highlights
from our ongoing exhibition
New Acquisitions and Highlights
atrium gallery
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exhibition details
Everybody Always Thinks They Are Right:
Stefan Sagmeister
September 3-28, 2008
Outdoor public installation on north corner of 7th and Main St
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Marc Swanson
Beginning to See the Light
July 2007 – January 2008
street level gallery
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Tangled Up In You
Connecting, Coexisting, and Conceiving Identity
street level gallery
February – September 2008
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exhibition details
Through the Rabbit Hole
Sleights of Scale and Flights of Fantasy
November 2006 – June 2007
street level gallery
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exhibition details
John Waters: Unwatchable Series
October 6 – December 11, 2006
street level gallery
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exhibition details
Mickie Winters
Learning to Bend Series
gallery 1 atrium level
Opening reception in conjunction with Ben Sollee cd release performance Nov 16th
and 17th 2008
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exhibition details