
Monique Meloche is pleased to announce the second solo
exhibition of new paintings by
Gabert Farrar
half colors of quarter-things
April 28 - June 3, 2006
opening reception for the artist Friday April 28th 6-9pm
half colors of quarter-things is a line from the Wallace Stevens
poem “The Motive for Metaphor” – a poem about how language
can never adequately describe experiences and how in order to describe
events we must make metaphors, saying this experience was like something
else.... and how the act of making metaphors, though creative, is a weakening,
a step removed from the actual indescribable experience.
This failure to communicate is brought to the forefront in Farrar’s
new series of large-scale, abstract paintings. Using text as a point of
departure – quotes from poetry and theoretical texts scattered about
the artist’s studio – Farrar works in a process-oriented manner,
with each subsequent step in the painting used to negate the previous
one. With the ultimate destruction of the text through abstraction, the
paintings are unburdened by any attempt to “address” anything
and exist on their own terms. The physical nature of this work directly
references his past work abstracting the desolate urban landscape. However,
these works grew out of a series of 23” square paintings of seemingly
disparate images arranged stacked or in grids. The artist states “The
main motivation for these multi-panel installations comes largely from
reading poems and examining how poetry communicates. A line of poetry
consists of words, each of which has their individual meaning. When combined,
these meanings form concepts or images which are further nuanced by sound
and rhythm which can either reinforce or negate the meanings of the words
or create new images altogether that are perceived simultaneously. It
is compelling how different images and concepts can exist simultaneously
and interdependently in a single line or stanza; and, it is this presentation
of connections that ultimately communicates something to the reader. This
series of paintings is an attempt to explore such a “presentation
of connections.”
With no preconceived agenda for subject matter, the series is made of
representational images ranging from urban landscapes to machinery to
anonymous prostitutes, hit-men and soldiers. Their placement creates a
dialogue with each image reinforcing or negating the next, and to break
up the cacophony the artist began in insert what he terms “generic
abstract paintings” primarily as a utilitarian function used to
break up the grid. These abstractions eventually grew into the larger
text-based paintings. Underlying themes begin to emerge once these paintings
are allowed to interact: war-destroyed cities as a metaphor for modern-day
tracts of undesigned urban spaces, which in turn serve as a breeding-ground
for anonymous city-created psychopaths; how this landscape denies active
human interaction forcing inhabitants to fundamentally disconnect from
their surroundings; how our interaction with machinery mediates, simulates,
or interprets our experiences; how people who exist as participants in
war become sub-human, an amalgam of man and machine, part cannon, part
person; and how, if the landscape of war is an analog to the modern-day
cityscape, we too are somehow sub-human.
Gabert Farrar (American b. 1972) holds a BFA from the University of Michigan
and currently resides in Chicago. His work was featured at LISTE 05: The
young art fair in Basel with moniquemeloche gallery and he has been in
group exhibitions at Locust Projects (Miami), Paragraph Gallery (Kansas
City), and in "I Feel Mysterious Today" at The Palm Beach Institute
of Contemporary Art curated by Dominic Molon.
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Swarming city..., 2006
acrylic, oil and spray enamel on canvas
66 x 71 ¼ inches
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