Kirsten StoltmannStill from the film “The First to Arrive”
 
Please join us for the opening of Psychosexual curated by Scott J. Hunter this Saturday (April 6) from 4-7pm! 
ANDREW RAFACZ continues the spring 2013 season with Psychosexual, curated by Scott J. Hunter. The exhibition includes work by Lutz Bacher, Tom Burr, Edmund Chia, Matthias Dornfeld, Jayson Keeling, Jutta Koether, Nazafarin Lotfi, Jeffry Mitchell, John Neff, Rachel Niffenegger, Peter Otto, Kirsten Stoltmann, and Brenna Youngblood. It continues through Saturday, May 25, 2013.
Psychosexual explores the constructed, yet unconscious meaning of the physical gesture in contemporary art making, and its intimacy and eroticism. The gesture, across mediums, is first and foremost taken as a representation of the artist’s underlying self, as it is envisioned, fabricated, and then executed. As such, it holds in its execution a projection of the artist’s desires and assertions. Its consequent evocation, in the mind of the viewer of the work, is a representation of the artist’s self; a projective identification by the viewer that is considered, taken in and incubated as memory, and which is then explored, challenged, or discharged. It is the intersubjectivity between artist and viewer that becomes a principal interest in this exhibition; to assess and frame how the artist’s and viewer’s unconscious eroticism becomes both psychologically and aesthetically tangible. A catalog, with essays by Jason Foumberg, Elijah Burgher, and Scott J. Hunter, is forthcoming during the run of the exhibition.

Kirsten Stoltmann
Still from the film “The First to Arrive”

 

Please join us for the opening of Psychosexual curated by Scott J. Hunter this Saturday (April 6) from 4-7pm! 

ANDREW RAFACZ continues the spring 2013 season with Psychosexual, curated by Scott J. Hunter. The exhibition includes work by Lutz Bacher, Tom Burr, Edmund Chia, Matthias Dornfeld, Jayson Keeling, Jutta Koether, Nazafarin Lotfi, Jeffry Mitchell, John Neff, Rachel Niffenegger, Peter Otto, Kirsten Stoltmann, and Brenna Youngblood. It continues through Saturday, May 25, 2013.


Psychosexual explores the constructed, yet unconscious meaning of the physical gesture in contemporary art making, and its intimacy and eroticism. The gesture, across mediums, is first and foremost taken as a representation of the artist’s underlying self, as it is envisioned, fabricated, and then executed. As such, it holds in its execution a projection of the artist’s desires and assertions. Its consequent evocation, in the mind of the viewer of the work, is a representation of the artist’s self; a projective identification by the viewer that is considered, taken in and incubated as memory, and which is then explored, challenged, or discharged. It is the intersubjectivity between artist and viewer that becomes a principal interest in this exhibition; to assess and frame how the artist’s and viewer’s unconscious eroticism becomes both psychologically and aesthetically tangible. 

A catalog, with essays by Jason Foumberg, Elijah Burgher, and Scott J. Hunter, is forthcoming during the run of the exhibition.

Thanks to everyone who came out for Jeremy Bolen in dialogue with Caroline Picard and Karsten Lund! (at Andrew Rafacz Gallery)

Thanks to everyone who came out for Jeremy Bolen in dialogue with Caroline Picard and Karsten Lund! (at Andrew Rafacz Gallery)

3 notes

John Opera
Forms I
cyanotype on stretched linen
21”x27”
ed. 3


New work by John Opera! See more here.

John Opera

Forms I

cyanotype on stretched linen

21”x27”

ed. 3

New work by John Opera! See more here.

Center Field | The Stage of Scientific Reproduction: An Interview with Jeremy Bolen

Jeremy Bolen was recently interviewed by Caroline Picard of Art:21. Click the link below to read the fantastic interview and learn more about Bolen’s process.

http://blog.art21.org/2013/02/26/center-field-the-stage-of-scientific-reproduction-an-interview-with-jeremy-bolen/#more-76544

Jeremy Bolen
350 feet above the Large Hadron Collider #1 (matter/anti-matter)
2012
archival pigment print, neodymium magnets
44.5 in x 36 in

Jeremy Bolen

350 feet above the Large Hadron Collider #1 (matter/anti-matter)

2012

archival pigment print, neodymium magnets

44.5 in x 36 in

colepierce:

Cody Hudson @ devening projects + editions by Paul Germanos on Flickr.

colepierce:

Cody Hudson @ devening projects + editions by Paul Germanos on Flickr.

6 notes

spacedbar:

Cody Hudson

It’s Lonely out in Space, 2009
ink and acrylic on wood panel
30” x 30”

Modern Drugs, 2011
wood
37” x 13.5” x 8”

via Andrew Rafacz Gallery

3 notes

The opening reception for Jeremy Bolen and Robert Burnier is right now- stop by! (at Andrew Rafacz Gallery)

The opening reception for Jeremy Bolen and Robert Burnier is right now- stop by! (at Andrew Rafacz Gallery)

1 note

Be sure to check out Jeremy Bolen’s “Cern” catalogue with text by Monica Westin tomorrow night!

Opening Reception is Saturday, February 9, from 4-7pm!

Be sure to check out Jeremy Bolen’s “Cern” catalogue with text by Monica Westin tomorrow night!

Opening Reception is Saturday, February 9, from 4-7pm!