Monique Meloche
is pleased to announce her 2nd solo show with
Todd Pavlisko
on
and on
Sept 7 - Oct 13, 2007
opening reception for the artist Friday Sept 7 from 6-9pm
moniquemeloche
118 N. Peoria
Chicago, IL 60607
312.455.0299
www.moniquemeloche.com
hours Tues-Sat 11am-6pm
"When world-famous writer and thinker Stephen Hawking returned to
terra firma after enjoying a lifelong dream of being suspended in a zero-gravity
environment, he said with absolute charm that he "could have gone
on and on." But, with bittersweet irony, Hawking's remark was painfully
undermined by the image of his frail body confined in a wheelchair and
his robotic digitized voice expressionlessly pining for endlessness. Even
the video images of his limp body floating in that staged and catered
environment project an odd sense of futility, reminding the viewer more
about the continuance of hopeless immobility and less about the sense
of freedom and fancy for which the trip was intended. Arguably, it's not
even a cynical read to see the whole experience as fleeting and sad.
Similarly, Todd Pavlisko's 2007 solo exhibition at moniquemeloche gallery—which
is anchored by an incredibly sensitive painting of the Hawking flight—speaks
volumes about life's cornucopia of calamity and our undying tendencies
to add levity to our existence with aspirational moments of dreaming,
chancing, socializing, collecting, drinking, playing, and basically just
trying to ignore the inevitable end… ad infinitum. In the gallery,
Pavlisko has orchestrated a handful of autonomous works that coalesce
into something more of an installation—an overall environment that
collectively keeps circling around these sanguine themes of paralyzing
hopelessness and the sobering veracity of life's impossibilities.
The painting of Hawking afloat in weightlessness begins the exhibition
dialogue by recasting the professor's event without all the fanfare—without
the flight crew tossing him around and raising his fist to help him express
enthusiasm. Instead, the sage of all sages floats serenely across the
span of the canvas—alone in his tranquility and poignantly captivated
by his own existential thoughts. The image is eerily reminiscent of Michelangelo's
classic Pietà where Christ's body lies limp in the lap of Mary.
Here however, with no other protagonist to complete the scene, the extension
of empathy falls symbolically into the hands of the viewer who, by extension,
assumes the role of Mary.
The installation continues with a large-scale sculpture where a fully
functional bumper car can be driven almost pointlessly inside an extremely
miniaturized arena, making a kinetic parallel to the Hawking painting
and further activating the space with a sense of tragic impracticality.
In the very front of the gallery, an elaborate contraption is situated
to create a mysterious leak through a small hole in a ceiling support
beam. Using wine as the dripping fluid, Pavlisko continues his ongoing
lexicon regarding the stereotypical staples surrounding the institution
of art and the art market. Likewise, an assisted readymade consisting
of gold-plated loose change lies serendipitously on the floor. The subtly
altered coins are, in their natural state, an exact anthology of all the
money the artist found in a year's time. On more metaphoric terms and
by way of the incongruous surface treatment, broader themes of value,
worth, and stability can easily be read into this unassuming sculpture.
The exhibition is nicely punctuated by two enormous framed, yet not "properly"
installed, found commercial images of cotton clouds in a clear blue sky.
By having these two-dimensional items exist as a sculpture, Pavlisko beautifully
completes his incompletion—and what better way to round out the
exhibition and connect all the works than the fleeting floating fancy
of an endless sky, fallen from grace, grounded, and leaning against the
wall. With all hope and no hope colliding ceaselessly throughout the space,
Pavlisko imparts his own cycle of repetitive desire with reminders around
every corner about the "on and on" grind of our own dismal daily
existence."
text excerpted from essay by Kristin Bly Rogers 2007
Todd Pavlisko (American b. 1974) lives in Chicago and
also maintains a studio in NY. He received his MFA from Carnegie Mellon
University in Pittsburgh and his BFA from Miami University in Oxford,
Ohio. His major installation Trophy Membership 2005 is in collection
of The Progressive Corporation, and he has work in the Frederick R. Weisman
Art Foundation (California) in addition to numerous private collections
from Chicago to New York to Panama. Recent group shows include I died
for Beauty curated by Omar Lopez Chahoud at Newman Popiashvili Gallery
NY, Changing Cities: Chicago curated by Paul Klein at Museum
of New Art Detroit, The Eclectic Eye: Selections of Fantasy and Illusion
from the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation at the Contemporary
Art Center New Orleans, and in Bearable Lightness...Likeness
curated by Franklin Sirmans at PS1, NY. Pavlisko is currently teaching
the First Year Program in Time Arts at The School of The Art Institute
of Chicago.
For further information please contact
Whitney Tassie or Jenny Shedor at
312.455.0299 or info@moniquemeloche.com
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on and on installation view
@ moniquemeloche
Again,
2007 in motion at the opening
bumper car, stainless steel and power source
3' x 7'7" x 7'7"
on and on, 2007 detail
acrylic on canvas
6 x 10 feet
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