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THE PERFECT STORM Tom
Berenz, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Julie Heffernan, Bill Jacobson, Simen Johan, Sarah
Anne Johnson, Kim Keever, Shai Kremer, Lori Nix, Karin Apollonia Müller and Yuki
Shingai. June 28-August 17, 2012 Curated by Edna Cardinale open
Saturday through June 30 July/August: Monday-Friday, 10-5
The Julie
Saul Gallery is pleased to present "The Perfect Storm", a group exhibition exploring
man-made and natural disasters. The selected artists use their work as a conduit
to address environmental, political and economic issues, each exploring man’s
tenuous relationship to nature in a global landscape fraught with uncertainty.
The destructive forces of nature, global warming, “the war on terror” and financial
uncertainty are all challenges we face today.
Televised news and the internet
are the most common visual sources of disaster coverage, spreading images of destruction
to the public on a daily basis. We see the aftermath of tornados, tsunamis, forest
fires or terrorist attacks captured in real-time. Each of the artists in this
show have been affected by this inundation of media imagery and has responded
in an individual way.
Climate change is an issue which often remains under
the surface, a repressed knowledge of our uncertain future. "Black Smoke" a ship
caught in an apocalyptic explosion of the artist's making is part of Sarah
Anne Johnson's "Arctic Wonderland" series. Photographed during a residency
to the Arctic Circle, Johnson altered the print surfaces using various manipulations
"to show not just what I saw, but how I feel about what I saw". Julie Heffernan's
paintings from the past year also focus on the havoc man is causing to the planet.
Embellished with symbolic references, Heffernan paints a prophetic narrative of
self-destruction and possible end to the world.
In Karin Apollonia Müller’s
diptych "Griffith" a helicopter hovers in the dark smoke of an assumed forest
fire, the photographer's presence creating a tension common in Müller’s "On Edge"
series. Inspired by "accidents and incidents, both big and small that disrupt
the picture we look at.. I wanted to evoke an elevated level of anxiety, brought
on by our witnessing of the systems we've created reaching their breaking points,
and the realization that we don't seem to be able to maintain the world we've
created for ourselves". Tom Berenz blurs the line between reality
and abstraction in his paintings of natural disasters. "Flood 3", part of a series
created in response to the "Big Three" automotive industry bailout depicts cars
floating in an asymmetrical pattern in murky flood water. One clearly defined
hub cap is the observers only concrete cue to its being.
Weather disasters
linked to home unify Lori Nix and Yuki Shingai's photographs. "Floating
House" was inspired by Nix's childhood growing up in rural western Kansas where
natural disasters were a common occurrence. Fabricated in the studio, Nix manifests
this past into miniature environments; evoking what a child might see when enveloped
in such an experience. Living in New York at the time of the earthquake and tsunami
that devastated Japan in 2011, Shingai was forced to obtain information about
her homeland through the news and internet. Facing away from the ocean, Shingai
stages pairs of shoes standing stoically and in line formation in the place of
the people who are absent. A bird flying overhead is the only witness to the scene,
offering the suggestion of life.
Simen Johan's, "Untitled #156"
is a mixture of natural and artificial elements put together to create a visual
distortion that feels fabricated and grotesquely surreal. The scene suggests an
oil spill, the animals frozen in terror.
On September 11, 2001 Bill
Jacobson felt compelled to go out and photograph. Best known for his out-of-focus
imagery and working on urban street scenes at the time, Jacobson shot the devastation
of the World Trade Center collapse from a distance, a large cloud of smoke seen
through an empty space in the city street. Viewed a decade later, the image can
be seen as a visual memory of the fog of uncertainty experienced that day.
Philip-Lorca
diCorcia's "East of Eden" series is a modern take on the Book of Genesis mixed
with the current economic crisis and political climate in the United States. DiCorcia
states, "It was kind of provoked by the collapse of everything, which seems to
me a loss of innocence. People thought they could have anything. And then it just
blew up in their faces". In a staged setting, a lone woman sits on the edge of
a bed in an empty room overlooking the city. A conversation of turmoil implied
by the tornado brewing on a flat screen tv out of her view.
We cannot escape
the complexities of our world, nor the effects its advancement has caused to the
environment and man.
Summer hours: June: Tuesday-Saturday 11-6 pm
July/August hours: Monday-Friday 10-5 pm (closed July 2, 3, 4 and 16th)
THE PERFECT STORM Tom Berenz, Philip-Lorca
diCorcia, Julie Heffernan, Bill Jacobson, Simen Johan, Sarah Anne Johnson, Kim
Keever, Shai Kremer, Lori Nix, Karin Apollonia Müller and Yuki Shingai. June
28-August 17, 2012
Entrance: Kim Keever Sunset,
2007 pigment print 31 x 48”, 32 1/2 x 49 1/2” framed edition of 3
Main Gallery East wall: Simen Johan Untitled #156,
2009 from the series Until the Kingdom Comes chromogenic print face mounted
on plexi 46 1/2 x 61 1/2", 49 x 64” framed edition of 6
Tom Berenz
Flood 3, 2009 oil on canvas 40 x 30”
North Wall: Bill
Jacobson #4146, 2001 chromogenic print 20 x 24", 28 1/4 x 30 1/4”
framed edition 1/9
Lori Nix Flood, 1998 chromogenic print
20 x 24" , 24 3/4 x 21” framed edition of 7
Philip-Lorca diCorcia
Untitled, from the series “East of Eden”, 2011 inkjet print 40 x 49
1/2” 41 7/8 x 51 3/4 x 1 3/4” framed edition 4/8
Yuki Shingai
14:46 JST, March 11, 2011 pigment print 22 1/2 x 30", 27 3/4 x 35” framed
edition 2/10
West wall: Karin Apollonia Müller Griffith,
2007 two chromogenic prints 60 x 48" each 61 x 49” each framed ap
1/2 from an edition of 5
South wall: Sarah Anne Johnson
Black Smoke, 2011-12 chromogenic print, photospotting and india inks and gouache
27 7/8 x 42", 49 x 35” framed edition 3/3
Julie Heffernan Study
for Falling Sky with Shipwreck, 2012 oil on canvas 52 x 60"
Shai
Kremer Chicago, Military Ground Force Training Site, 2007 chromogenic
print 22 x 28", 28 1/2 x 35 1/4” framed edition 2/10
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For additional information contact the gallery
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| New
York Times, Friday, July 6, 2012 The
New Yorker, August 2012

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