"Cosmic Anomic Dancehall" [mp3 removed]
This is a remix--the crazed, distorted lead instrument is a performance by Travis Hallenbeck (mp3 no. 2) from his tracks page. Apologies and thanks, Travis.
"Cosmic Anomic Dancehall" [mp3 removed]
This is a remix--the crazed, distorted lead instrument is a performance by Travis Hallenbeck (mp3 no. 2) from his tracks page. Apologies and thanks, Travis.
More Than Words
Opening: Thursday, September 4, 6 - 8PM
Von Lintel Gallery
555 West 25th Street
September 4 - October 11, 2008
Text is everywhere, bombarding us daily without our having to open a book
or power-up a computer. Newspaper headlines greet us on our way to work;
billboards hover; text messages stream through space and tickers run
across screens,
poisoning the cognitive environment with brain-damaging information glut
measuring the pulse of our world. Text also plays a
ubiquitous role in contemporary art. Von Lintel Gallery is pleased to
present More Than Words, an exhibition of work by artists who
seek to withdraw from the infoglut spectacle into a world of jouissant, unsullied image and sound
are drawn to
text as subject and which explores the challenges they face incorporating
it into their chosen medium.
Biologist E. O Wilson theorizes that the symbols of all languages are
intrinsically pleasing to the eye, albeit in very different ways. That
notion is certainly
disproven by bad corporate logos and ubiquitous use of fonts such as "Comic Sans"
borne out by the long, rich history--from hieroglyphs
to corporate logos, from illuminated manuscripts to graffiti--of the
intertwining of these two very different modes of visual expression, image
and text.
Inevitably, when we encounter text in art we
walk on to the next piece
first “read” its literal
meaning. But the absorption of linguistic signs into this new formal
structure decontextualizes them, freeing them from their normal
significance. Letters, words and phrases take on new and unexpected
metaphoric roles as they are subsumed within the form inherent to a
particular work of art. It is this expanded capacity for meaning that
makes text in art more than just words.
Selected participating artists: Carl Andre, Fiona Banner, Nayland Blake,
Michael Cooper, Lesley Dill, Stephen Ellis, Lee Etheredge IV, Graham
Gillmore, Guy Goodwin, Shirazeh Houshiary, Robert Indiana, Ellen Kahn,
Joyce Kim, Lawrence Lee, Glenn Ligon, Mark Lombardi, Suzanne McClelland,
Bruce Nauman, Aaron Parazette, Richard Prince, Nicolas Rule, Ed Ruscha,
John Walker, Michael Waugh.