Foxy Production

Michael Wang

22 Oct - 21 Nov 2015

Westend, Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf
MICHAEL WANG
Terroir
22 October - 21 November 2015

Foxy Production presents Terroir, Michael Wang’s new and ongoing series of paintings based on the geological foundations of world cities. Wang’s monochrome paintings are created from the pulverized bedrock of Barcelona, Berlin, Hong Kong, London, Milan, New York, and Paris. A fragment of the original stone accompanies each painting, and an artist’s book documents the collection sites.

“Terroir” usually refers to the flavor a soil imparts to a crop—a flavor unique to a particular place. Wang applies this term to the largely unseen and unconsidered earth of highly branded and commodified metropolises.

The artist traveled to each city to collect rocks from construction sites, parks, and roadsides, which he packed into his carry-on luggage to transport back to his studio in New York. There, he subjected each sample to several stages of crushing and grinding until he arrived at a fine powder, which was then used to make pigment. Slowly building up transparent layers of paint, he has achieved complex, luminous colors: the colors of the cities themselves. Each city has a different geology – Berlin is built on gray-brown glacial sands; Hong Kong, rusty sandstone; New York, glittering black schist – giving each painting a particular hue, tone, and mood.

Wang’s project could be understood as Land Art – or as Robert Smithson termed it, “earth works” – on a global scale. The artist has used air travel to connect international cities through their substrates. The work could be seen also as Land Art that has been condensed to a human scale, where a single painting holds the trace of a city’s foundations.

Wang’s paintings, while abstract, have relationships to figures and materials, to specific urban places and their soils: each city is the protagonist within its own canvas. The artist’s interventions in each place are so direct that the mechanics of representation become complicated. Echoing the inquiries of early Conceptual Art, Terroir incisively researches disruptions between the real and the symbolic, and between the visible and invisible.

Michael Wang (Olney, MD, 1981) lives and works in New York City. He holds an M.Arch. from Princeton, an M.A. from NYU, and a B.A. from Harvard. Recent exhibitions include: RIVALS, Andrea Rosen Gallery 2, New York (solo)(2014-15); Monument to Cold War Victory, The Cooper Union, New York; As We Were Saying: Art and Identity in the Age of ‘Post’, curated by Claire Barliant, The Elizabeth Foundation, New York (both 2014); Liquid Autist, curated by Daniel Keller, Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler, Berlin; Spaces for Drawing, The Hite Collection, Seoul; Global Tone, Foxy Production, New York (solo) (all 2013); Differentiation Series, Primetime, Brooklyn, NY (solo); and the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA (two-person) (both 2012.) Wang’s writing is included in the forthcoming publication Mass Effect: Art and the Internet in the Twenty-First Century, edited by Lauren Cornell and Ed Halter, New Museum and MIT (2015.)
 

Tags: Ed Halter, Daniel Keller, Michael Wang