Gagosian

Piotr Uklanski

27 Mar - 31 May 2008

© Piotr Uklanski
Untitled (Stach's Eagle), 2008
Steel frame, foam and gesso
160 x 93 x 150 inches (406.4 x 236.2 x 381 cm)
PIOTR UKLAŃSKI
"Biało-Czerwona"

Thursday, March 27 – Saturday, May 17, 2008
Opening reception for the artist: Thursday March 27th, from 6 to 8pm

Gagosian Gallery is pleased to announce BIAŁO-CZERWONA, an exhibition by Piotr Uklański. This is the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery.
“Biało-Czerwona” (white-red), referring to Poland’s bi-colored flag, is a nationalist slogan as familiar to Poles as “Red, White, and Blue” is to Americans. Uklański’s title unites diverse works that engage typical imagery of his native Poland and play on the red/white palette.
Although BIAŁO-CZERWONA is, on one level, authentically Polish, in its use of populist decorative traditions and political symbols alluding to the country’s not-so-distant Communist past the exhibition is also a highly stylized performance of identity. In international contexts such as the 2004 Bienal de São Paulo, Uklański has represented Poland; elsewhere he has been labeled a “New York artist” or an “international artist”: The art world demands that artists disavow their cultural authenticity one moment and embrace it the next. Uklański recognizes just how powerful this fluidity can be and uses this occasion to embody simultaneously the roles of international artist, Gastarbeiter, new American, and patriotic Pole.
Throughout the exhibition, Uklański utilizes cheap materials to create works that draw on the celebratory ambitions and aggrandizing stagecraft of political events. By fusing such propagandist gestures with vernacular techniques and materials borrowed from popular folk traditions—-exemplified in Szopki Krakowskie (Christmas crèche scenes)and a site-specific mosaic fashioned from ceramic dishware—- he conjures an idealized vision of his homeland. Not only does Uklański exploit the “exotic” quality of these indigenous forms; by reifying their very
ordinariness, he elicits beauty from the confines of lo-fi objects. At once monumental and humble, collective and individual, profound and banal, theatrical and genuine, the works in BIAŁOCZERWONA advance Uklański’s ongoing project to create deliberately unstable political, formal, and symbolic meaning in art.
Piotr Uklański was born in 1968 in Warsaw. Recent solo exhibitions include Summer Love: The First Polish Western, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2007); Piotr Uklański: A Retrospective, at the Wiener Secession, Vienna (2007); and The Joy of Photography at the Musée d’art moderne et contemporain, Strasbourg (2007). He currently lives in New York and Warsaw.
 

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