Jane South
20 Jan - 08 Mar 2009
JANE SOUTH
January 20th – February 21st, 2009
Opening Tuesday January 20th, 6-8pm
*Now extended through The Armory Show, March 5th-8th*
Spencer Brownstone Gallery is pleased to present our fourth solo exhibition of new work by Jane South.
Showcasing pieces that range in scale from intimate wall works to a large floor piece assembled in-situ at the gallery, South's new work sees her characteristic architectural and industrial forms proliferate into ever more dense and engaging constructions. While continuing to use cut, folded and painted paper (reviewing her last solo exhibition at Spencer Brownstone Gallery, Artforum magazine described South as "equal parts structural engineer and virtuoso origamist"), the artist here moves away from the sometimes fragile constructions of her early work toward more robust forms, often bolstered by wooden frames.
A major new freestanding piece forms the centerpiece of the show, appearing as if the wall works have been broken down and their individual components reassembled modular-style on an open framework. The ability to move around, into and out of the piece is a new departure for the artist's work, multiplying the viewpoints from which it can be seen, doubling and tripling the overlapping lattices with their optical moiré patterns and giddy leaps in scale from the intimate to the immense.
Standing back, the piece gives the impression of some arcane mechanized structure whose function is long since forgotten. It seems somehow aware of its own redundancy, its faded pink coloring suggesting that the artist's previous muscular industrial reds have been left to idle and fade (or recalling the Sysiphean paint jobs on New York City bridges, never completed).
A circular piece built into the gallery's partition wall is also emblematic of the artist's new work. Resembling the architectural feature of an oculus, eye-like the piece bulges out from the wall on one side, allowing chinks of light to come through from behind the partition. But only partially. Obfuscating as much as it enlightens, we are required to approach, peer into, and move around its mutely staring frame in order to marvel at its intricate interior.
Jane South was born in Manchester, England, and lives and works in Brooklyn. She has exhibited widely, at venues including the Whitney Museum of American Art; Weatherspoon Art Museum, NC; Mobile Museum of Art, Alabama; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; and the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, CT. Reviews and articles on the artist’s work have appeared in Artforum, Art In America, Frieze, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and The Village Voice. January/February will offer a double opportunity to see the artist’s work in New York. Alongside her show at Spencer Brownstone Gallery, Jane’s current solo exhibition at the Queens Museum, Bulova Center will continue through February 13th. 2009 also sees upcoming exhibitions for the artist at Herter Art Gallery, University of Massachusetts, and the Museum of Arts and Design, New York.
January 20th – February 21st, 2009
Opening Tuesday January 20th, 6-8pm
*Now extended through The Armory Show, March 5th-8th*
Spencer Brownstone Gallery is pleased to present our fourth solo exhibition of new work by Jane South.
Showcasing pieces that range in scale from intimate wall works to a large floor piece assembled in-situ at the gallery, South's new work sees her characteristic architectural and industrial forms proliferate into ever more dense and engaging constructions. While continuing to use cut, folded and painted paper (reviewing her last solo exhibition at Spencer Brownstone Gallery, Artforum magazine described South as "equal parts structural engineer and virtuoso origamist"), the artist here moves away from the sometimes fragile constructions of her early work toward more robust forms, often bolstered by wooden frames.
A major new freestanding piece forms the centerpiece of the show, appearing as if the wall works have been broken down and their individual components reassembled modular-style on an open framework. The ability to move around, into and out of the piece is a new departure for the artist's work, multiplying the viewpoints from which it can be seen, doubling and tripling the overlapping lattices with their optical moiré patterns and giddy leaps in scale from the intimate to the immense.
Standing back, the piece gives the impression of some arcane mechanized structure whose function is long since forgotten. It seems somehow aware of its own redundancy, its faded pink coloring suggesting that the artist's previous muscular industrial reds have been left to idle and fade (or recalling the Sysiphean paint jobs on New York City bridges, never completed).
A circular piece built into the gallery's partition wall is also emblematic of the artist's new work. Resembling the architectural feature of an oculus, eye-like the piece bulges out from the wall on one side, allowing chinks of light to come through from behind the partition. But only partially. Obfuscating as much as it enlightens, we are required to approach, peer into, and move around its mutely staring frame in order to marvel at its intricate interior.
Jane South was born in Manchester, England, and lives and works in Brooklyn. She has exhibited widely, at venues including the Whitney Museum of American Art; Weatherspoon Art Museum, NC; Mobile Museum of Art, Alabama; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; and the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, CT. Reviews and articles on the artist’s work have appeared in Artforum, Art In America, Frieze, The New York Times, The New Yorker, and The Village Voice. January/February will offer a double opportunity to see the artist’s work in New York. Alongside her show at Spencer Brownstone Gallery, Jane’s current solo exhibition at the Queens Museum, Bulova Center will continue through February 13th. 2009 also sees upcoming exhibitions for the artist at Herter Art Gallery, University of Massachusetts, and the Museum of Arts and Design, New York.