Jorge Pardo
12 Sep - 10 Oct 2009
JORGE PARDO
Sep 12 - Oct 10, 2009
Reception 12 September 2009
6.00 – 8.00pm
1301PE is pleased to announce an exhibition of significant works from the collection of Pae White by Jorge Pardo. This will be the first exhibition exclusively devoted to this outstanding body of work by Pardo. A contemporary of Pardo's, White was an early supporter when they were both students at Art Center Collage of Design in the late 1980s. Over the past 20 years, White has assembled a private collection of seminal works acquired at the time of their making.
The exhibition spans Pardo’s career, from his pinhole camera works to his resent Penelope lamp subscription. The collection contains key elements of Pardo’s visual language and traces Pardo’s evolution into one of his generations’ most important artists.
Over the course of his career, Pardo has employed a wide variety of mediums to explore his interests. As he pursues a particular course of exploration and inquiry derived from current interests, locations, conversations, etc., Pardo work creates frames for our experience. This can take place at a personal level, as in the series of photographs in 2008 which he refers to his childhood and family. Or it can take place at the level of cultural critique, as in White People Are Devils, 1991.
His recent works follow this familiar concept, but with a new twist. Pardo said about his temporary installation of the Pre-Columbian collection at LACMA that “The intention is to create a complete visual and historical experience and encourage further examination of what may previously have gone unnoticed. By housing the collection in a contemporary context it is hoped that the works become more accessible to today’s museum visitor.”
Sep 12 - Oct 10, 2009
Reception 12 September 2009
6.00 – 8.00pm
1301PE is pleased to announce an exhibition of significant works from the collection of Pae White by Jorge Pardo. This will be the first exhibition exclusively devoted to this outstanding body of work by Pardo. A contemporary of Pardo's, White was an early supporter when they were both students at Art Center Collage of Design in the late 1980s. Over the past 20 years, White has assembled a private collection of seminal works acquired at the time of their making.
The exhibition spans Pardo’s career, from his pinhole camera works to his resent Penelope lamp subscription. The collection contains key elements of Pardo’s visual language and traces Pardo’s evolution into one of his generations’ most important artists.
Over the course of his career, Pardo has employed a wide variety of mediums to explore his interests. As he pursues a particular course of exploration and inquiry derived from current interests, locations, conversations, etc., Pardo work creates frames for our experience. This can take place at a personal level, as in the series of photographs in 2008 which he refers to his childhood and family. Or it can take place at the level of cultural critique, as in White People Are Devils, 1991.
His recent works follow this familiar concept, but with a new twist. Pardo said about his temporary installation of the Pre-Columbian collection at LACMA that “The intention is to create a complete visual and historical experience and encourage further examination of what may previously have gone unnoticed. By housing the collection in a contemporary context it is hoped that the works become more accessible to today’s museum visitor.”