
Monique Meloche is pleased to
announce our summer group show
Bring
It On!
Featuring work by Brock Enright, Brian Finke,
Luis Gispert, Cassandra C. Jones, and New Catalogue
June 9 - July 29, 2006
Opening reception Friday June 9th, 6-9 pm, with performances by the Chicago
Spirit Brigade at 7:30pm
Bring It On! is a multi-media group exhibition exploring the
all-American phenomenon of cheerleading – a tradition which has
become somewhat of a pop culture obsession, featured in films like
Bring it On and the reality TV show Cheer Nation. “Either
you were a cheerleader or wanted to be one” is an often cited phrase
summing up this conflicted team sport. “Cheerleader” equals
popular, perky, and pretty, however it also equals type-A overachiever
and cut-throat competitor. From sporty to campy to sexy to downright pathetic,
the artwork in Bring it On! investigates the boundaries
of and associations with cheerleading. Brock Enright
explores the sinister side of the cheerleader and the jock saga in his
video and installation, while Brian Finke exposes the
“hyper-real” moments of competitive cheerleaders through photography.
Luis Gispert uses humor in his photos and videos of “hip-hop”
cheerleaders to touch on more socio-political issues, while Cassandra
C. Jones objectifies the cheerleader as a seemingly decorative
yet pornographic figure via wallpaper. The collaborative group New
Catalogue rounds out the show with a series of photos cheering
themselves on with a squad of slacker cheerleaders. The opening night
will feature performanes by the Chicago Spirit Brigade
unified by their love of cheerleading and desire to promote H.I.V. and
Aids awareness.
Brock Enright (American, b. 1976) received his MFA from
Columbia University and currently lives and works in New York. The video
and assemblage sculptures included here are part of his collaborative
project “FOREST” with Ivan Hürzeler exhibited at Cynthia
Broan Gallery NY earlier this year. In 2005, Enright and Hürzeler
organized a camping expedition that involved taking a group of artists,
actors and friends on a five-day camping trip/performance centered on
a cheerleading theme. Enright’s work, derived from this trip, hints
at the hormone-effected youth that are cheerleaders and athletes. The
feature-length film documenting the trip (directed by Hürzeler) will
be screened in Chicago at the Betty Rymer Gallery later this summer. Enright
shows with Vilma Gold in London and has had group exhibitions at the Moore
Space and Fredric Snitzer Gallery in Miami, P.S.1 in Long Island City,
MASS MOCA, and LACE in Los Angeles. Enright currently owns and runs Video
and Adventure Services, a business/art project that offers kidnapping
as well as a host of “customized reality adventures” to CEOs
and celebrities.
Brian Finke (American, b. 1976) holds a BFA from the
School of Visual Arts in NY where he currently lives and works. Often
working in a series, Finke spent two years on the sidelines of high school
and college football games photographing cheerleaders. These images tell
a story of the continuing drama of cheerleading played out in small towns
and urban cities across America. His work explores the lives and development
of cheerleaders and how they address such issues as social behavior, sexuality
and individuality. His book 2-4-6-8: American Cheerleaders and Football
Players was published by Umbrage Editions in 2003. Finke has had
solo shows at the Jacksonville Museum of Modern Art in Florida, ClampArt
in NY, Stephen Cohen in LA, and Catherine Edelman Gallery in Chicago.
His photos are in collections such as the Bibliotheque Nationale de France,
Museum of Fine Art Houston, Saint Louis Art Museum, and Kiyosata Museum
of Photographic Arts in Japan. Finke also photographs for GQ,
Entertainment Weekly, Los Angeles Times Magazine,
Rolling Stone, and The New Yorker.
Luis Gispert (American, b. 1972) received his MFA from
Yale University, his BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago,
and currently lives and works in Brooklyn. Gispert’s photographs
and videos mimic pop-culture iconography while simultaneously twisting
it. His complexly composed photographs attest to the Baroqueness of the
hip-hop subculture that is infiltrating the mainstream. Blinged-out Latina
cheerleaders floating in a green screen emphasize identity politics and
today’s blurring of socio-cultural lines. In 2005, Gispert &
Jeffery Reed exhibited their collaborative video “Stereomongrel”
at The Whitney Museum NY, Zach Feuer Gallery NY, and at the Santa Barbara
Contemporary Arts Forum. His work is in such collections as the Guggenheim
Museum, Whitney Museum of American Art, New Museum of Contemporary Art,
and the Miami Art Museum. Gispert was recently featured in the Independent
Curators International group show “Situation Comedy: Humor In Recent
Art” at the Chicago Cultural Center curated by Dominic Molon (MCA
Chicago) and Michael Rooks (MCA Honolulu).
Cassandra C. Jones (American b. 1975) holds an MFA from
Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh and currently lives and works in
Los Angeles. Jones’ Good Cheer is an installation of wallpaper
is decoratively patterned with colorful rosettes. Upon closer inspection,
the viewer discovers that the pattern is actually composed of found snapshot
photographs of cheerleaders performing high kicks and routine stunts that
flaunt their briefs. Pitting the domestic wallpaper against the sexual
imagery, the work of art physically surrounds the viewer in with a paradox
of ethical ambiguity between family values and pornography. In 2006, Jones
made a special project booth with Nathan Larramendy Gallery at the PULSE
Fair in NY. She has had solo exhibitions with Larramendy in CA and at
the Melwood Gallery in Pittsburgh. Jones was recently an artist-in-residency
at the Drake Hotel in Toronto, Canada. Jones' website is: http://cassandrac.googlepages.com/
New Catalogue is a collaboration between Chicago-based
Luke Batten (American b. 1968) with an MFA from the School of the Art
Institute of Chicago and Jonathan Sadler (American b. 1965) with an MFA
from The Museum School of Fine Arts, Boston. New Catalogue has been described
by Tony Wight as “a production project that parallels the corporate
model of a stock photo agency while simultaneously expanding upon and
critiquing this model. Their various series explore contemporary issues
and popular culture while augmenting the discourse surrounding traditional
genres of photographic image making.” New Catalogue had a solo exhibition
“The Lost Cheerleaders” at Bodybuilder & Sportsman Gallery,
where they debuted their book Big Ten Co-Eds, Preppy Girls, and The
Lost Cheerleaders published by Nazraeli Press. Photos from The Lost
Cheerleaders will be featured alongside a new text-based work employing
New Catalogue’s strategy of using this iconic image to cheer on
their own brand name. Their work was featured in the Prague Biennial 2005
at the National Gallery of Prague and had a solo project at the MCA Chicago
in their 12x12/new artists new work series in 2004. Batten is
an Assistant Professor at the School of Art & Design at the University
of Illinois, Champaign and Sadler is an Instructor of digital photography
at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Chicago Spirit Brigade was founded in 2003 as a non-profit,
all-volunteer adult cheerleading organization. They are rooted in the
Gay/Lesbian community but are welcoming to all. The organization’s
goals are to provide support to people living with life-threatening challenges
through their “Spread the Cheer!” program and to promote unity
and celebrate diversity with their collegiate-style cheerleading. Chicago
Spirit Brigade is part of the Pride Cheerleading Association, a growing
list of nationwide community-based cheer squads that raise money for grassroots
organizations who work hard on the frontlines to provide relief to those
suffering within our communities. Don’t miss their performances
at Chicago’s Gay Games Saturday July 15th at the Opening Ceremonies
and Sunday July 16th at the 2pm Cheer/Color Guard Exhibition. Check out
their website at: www.chicagospiritbrigade.org
back to top
|
|
|