Susanne Vielmetter

Shana Lutker

19 Jun - 31 Jul 2010

© Shana Lutker
"Re-formation and Counter Re-formation (study no.1), Re-formation and Counter Re-formation (study no.2), R.
SHANA LUTKER
"H. Y. S. T. et al."

June 19 - July 31, 2010

Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects is pleased to present H. Y. S. T. et al., an exhibition of new work by Shana Lutker. Drawing from research of the invention of hysteria, the beginnings of psychoanalysis and its legacy in art, Shana Lutker has developed a series of objects that are hovering in a peculiar state. They are specific and deliberate yet also premature or incomplete. Dream objects, they exist as ideas, sketches or hypotheses. In that way they reference the process of thinking, the subjectivity of memory, and the impossibility of translating an idea into three dimensions without a loss of potential.

In his study of hysteria, early psychologist J. M. Charcot relied on a 15 year old woman who came to his Salpétrière Hospital in Paris in 1876. Charcot gave her the name "Augustine," though she was sometimes referred to in hospital papers as "Genevieve," or as "L.," "X.," or sometimes as "G." Her name was not fixed, but she was his model patient, performing her symptoms, notably holding poses of different emotional states for a series of early photographs often sited and reproduced in texts on psychology, photography, and feminism. In 1885, Sigmund Freud came to study with Charcot, and the time he spent at the Salpétrière was formative. He respected Charcot as a mentor but questioned his method of treatment, leading directly to Freud's practice of psychoanalysis and the interpretation of dreams. In 1928, Andre Breton and Louis Aragon acknowledged and celebrated the "50th Birthday of Hysteria" in their magazine Le Surrealiste Revolution. They thank Charcot profusely for the "greatest poetic discovery of the end of the 19th century" and for the pin-up photographs of "delicious" young Augustine.

The relationship between psychoanalysis and representation, the interpretation of history, and the inherent incompleteness of translation are at play in H. Y. S. T. et al. Mainly made of steel, leather, and wood, objects in the exhibition are based on things seen in photographs, reminiscent of tools and objects used by Charcot, Freud and Breton. They are rather mysterious about their function and form, simplified and refined to be more bare, more naked. Each titled with a letter of the alphabet, the sculptures take the shapes of their titles. It is unclear as to whether the letters shaped the objects or the shape of the objects led to the titles.

This is Shana Lutker's second solo exhibition at the gallery. Her work has been shown in one-person exhibitions at Artists Space, New York; Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm; The Suburban, Chicago; the Wattis Institute at CCA, San Francisco; and the Room Gallery, UC Irvine. Her work was included in the 2008 and 2006 California Biennials and Performa 09, as well as recent group exhibitions at MassMOCA; John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Wisconsin; Luckman Fine Arts Gallery at CalState LA; small a projects, Lisa Cooley Gallery, Harris Lieberman, and D'Amelio Terras, New York; Contemporary Arts Forum and University Art Museum at UC Santa Barbara; and Gallery 400, Chicago. She received her MFA from UCLA in 2005.

Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects is located at 6006 Washington Blvd in Culver City, 1 block west of La Cienega at Sentney Avenue, on the south side of the street. Gallery parking is available across the street from the gallery off of Sentney Avenue. Gallery Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 11 am - 6 pm and by appointment.
 

Tags: André Breton, Shana Lutker