Shane Aslan Selzer: Lisa Dent Gallery.In her notably assured first solo exhibition, young San Francisco-based artist Shane Aslan Selzer employed an aesthetic both calculated in its range and instinctual in·stinc·tu·al adj. Of, relating to, or derived from instinct. See Synonyms at instinctive. in·stinc tu·al·ly adv. in its use of unusual materials. At Lisa Dent Gallery, Selzer mined a challenging artistic vein sparked, arguably ar·gu·a·ble adj. 1. Open to argument: an arguable question, still unresolved. 2. That can be argued plausibly; defensible in argument: three arguable points of law. , by the likes of Rachel Harrison Rachel Harrison (born 1966, New York) is an artist based in New York. Harrison has show work internationally in many exhibitions including ‘Posh Floored as Ali G Tackles Beck’ at Arndt & Partner [1] in Berlin, ‘Should home windows or shutters be via a well-choreographed suite of works in a variety of media--sculpture, photography, video, and print. The show was installed in two rooms, one of which basked in primarily natural light while the other was dark enough to accommodate an atmospheric video installation. Both settings demonstrated the artist's skill at commanding space and context with an economy of means. The placement of each object also appeared to have been carefully considered, even if much of the work depended on impulse. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Included were several sculptures based on niches, perches, and pedestals, most of them mixing sturdy materials (drywall, plywood) with more ephemeral Temporary. Fleeting. Transitory. ones (glass, fishing line, Mylar). Often, the sculptures' bases or supports--their rough seams deliberately exposed and sawhorse forms consciously repeated--are integral to their effect. In the gallery's lighter room, a zigzag arrangement of free-standing screens made from lightweight silver-and-gold emergency blankets housed and connected a number of individual works. The ability to successfully utilize such unorthodox materials is one of Selzer's strengths, and in spite of their evident flimsiness, the objects and their display mechanism immediately commanded the room. In portrait looking in (all works 2005), Selzer uses a V-shaped arrangement of screens to showcase a hand-carved wooden structure that resembles a canoe standing on end. The combination of elements formed a shrine of sorts, the reflective silver summoning a low-rent, quasi-religious magic. Adjacent screens further subdivided the room, creating a narrow passageway in which Selzer placed two other works. One, three birds, is a small plaster blob in which three beer-bottle caps imprinted with images of fowl are embedded, and which sits on a shelf of unfinished drywall. The other, portrait untitled, is a large color photograph of Henriette Wyeth's studio in San Patricio, New Mexico San Patricio is a very small community in Lincoln County, in the U.S. state of New Mexico. It is located on the Rio Ruidoso and U.S. Highway 70, between the communities of Hondo and Glencoe. It is just east of the Lincoln National Forest. , other shots of which form the basis of a handsome artist's book given away at the gallery. Each of these was subtly altered by its proximity to the glimmering screens, the ordinary function of which is to absorb or deflect heat but here served to absorb or deflect the viewer's gaze. Nearby was pair of workhorses, two elegant steel forms akin to the titular tit·u·lar adj. 1. Relating to, having the nature of, or constituting a title. 2. a. Existing in name only; nominal: the titular head of the family. b. workshop mainstays. That one of these stands on its four legs while the other has apparently toppled over doesn't undercut either the sturdiness of their construction or their sleek surfaces' reference to Minimalist min·i·mal·ist n. 1. One who advocates a moderate or conservative approach, action, or policy, as in a political or governmental organization. 2. A practitioner of minimalism. adj. 1. sculpture. In the gallery's second room were three other works, the most striking of which was horizon, drawing in blue, a mantlelike structure roughly constructed from drywall with a sheet of blue glass inclining toward the viewer at a formidably sharp angle. Close inspection reveals that the glass is anchored by a smaller piece of darker glass wedged wedged - 1. To be stuck, incapable of proceeding without help. This is different from having crashed. If the system has crashed, it has become totally non-functioning. If the system is wedged, it is trying to do something but cannot make progress; it may be capable of doing a few beneath it and by two nearly invisible strands of nylon thread. It seems about to crash to the floor yet remains perfectly poised, demonstrating an intoxicating in·tox·i·cate v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates v.tr. 1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol. 2. tension that pervades Selzer's entire enterprise. |
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