Roxy Paine “Apparatus” at Kavi Gupta, Chicago (Elizabeth St.)

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Roxy Paine, Apparatus, 2013. Installation view. Courtesy the artist and Kavi Gupta, Chicago/Berlin

Roxy Paine
Apparatus

20 September – 20 December 2013
at Kavi Gupta, Chicago (Elizabeth St.)

Roxy Paine’s work has challenged the perception of visual language and how it affects the understanding of our environments since the genesis of his career in the early nineties. Focusing on objects and their fabrication, Paine strives to evoke a desire to understand how meaning can transcend through time, using our conventional relationships with the visual as an anchor for the exploration of truth. Paine’s contemplative work has ventured into two distinct, yet related, avenues of artistic production. Highly acclaimed for his synthetic replicas of organic forms such as fungi and trees, intricately executed with impressive mastery and ingenuity, and his computer-driven machines programed to auto-produce works of art, Paine presents a complex arena where the balance between what we know to be true and what we can learn from a deeper contemplative observation is considered. A truth dependent on our willingness to accept the beauty in the imperfections within nature and language itself, a balance in paradoxical poetics.
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“Observer Effect” at Gallery 400, Chicago

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Steve Roden, Striations, 2010–11. Two 16mm films with ink transferred to video, 6:00 min. (still). Courtesy the artist and Gallery 400

Observer Effect
18 January – 9 March 2013
at Gallery 400, Chicago

Artists: Jessica Hyatt, Steffani Jemison, Jochen Lempert, John O’Connor, Steve Roden, Jorinde Voigt
Curated by Carrie Gundersdorf and Lorelei Stewart

Across media and approaches, Observer Effect examines how artworks incorporate processes akin to the scientific method as a means to examine and understand specific phenomena that exist in the world. Each artist’s idiosyncratic approach of observing and understanding his/her distinct subject matter reveals the artist’s own subjectivity through this process, and discloses how each artist, the observer, is part of what is being observed.
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