Reviews, profiles and news about art in Chicago

Fall Openings: A Gallery Preview

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Diana Guerrero-Macia

Diana Guerrero-Macia

As we consider the fall lineup in the West Loop gallery district, it’s probably best to start with a roundup of a few changes that took place over the summer while the rest of us were off educating our palettes with Old Style, PBR and brats. First, the bad news: Lisa Boyle Gallery and Gescheidle closed. Both proprietors are continuing to work with their artists, but are abandoning their permanent spaces to become members of the aspirational class of wily independents. Gardenfresh is shuttering its doors at the end of the month after a final group exhibition, transforming itself into a vaguely defined “nomadic curatorial collective.” All of this is making me wonder if Chicago’s art market will ever be able to sustain a diverse gallery scene, or if it’s time to stop complaining and acknowledge that Chicago (at its best) is about short-term interventions whose benefits are innovation and a DIY ethic where anything goes. Some, however, are adapting. ThreeWalls downsized, eliminating its Solo gallery while maintaining its larger exhibition space and residency program. Not one to waste time, Scott Speh has moved his Western Exhibitions into the vacant spot, pleasing everyone who enjoys centralization. Finally, Bodybuilder & Sportsman and BucketRider have both changed their names to reflect the identities of their owners: Tony Wight Gallery and Andrew Rafacz Gallery, respectively.

The West Loop is busy this September and a few standouts deserve special attention. Two galleries, Kavi Gupta and Rhona Hoffman, are featuring independently curated exhibitions. At Hoffman, art critic and curator Terry Myers continues his theme of “ambient materialism” in “Angles in America.” Despite the precious title, the show is a broad and well-conceived treatment of geometry and angularity that spans forty years of American art. Myers’ focus on what Siegfried Kracauer called “surface-level expressions,” in contrast to grand historical statements, leads to a varied group of artists working in almost every medium. This is not your father’s modernism—Mary Heilmann’s 1980s bright abstractions interact with a Robert Overby post-Minimalist cast door and contemporary films by Jennifer West and Laura Riboli.

Curator, critic and ex-Chicagoan Marc Leblanc has put together a show of metaphysical, neo-Romantic Los Angeles artists at Kavi Gupta. Go for a crash course in form and formlessness. Rashid Johnson is also returning home for a double feature at Monique Meloche and Richard Gray. At Meloche, Johnson is creating “a creolized orgy between Sun Ra, Paul Gaugin, Kazmir Malevich, Debra Dickerson and Eldridge Cleaver (if his soul were no longer on ice).” Sound fun? Try the shea butter. Across the street, Diana Guerrero-Maciá has new work at Tony Wight; her combinations of text and image in large-scale collages underscore the arbitrariness and absurdity of symbolic representation, while experienced veterans Josiah McElheny and Cristina Iglesias present new work at Donald Young. Punk-rocker Patrick Berran’s abstract paintings at Thomas Robertello are at once more serene and dirty than expected. So fans, it’s a new season. Pull out the pompoms and grab your free beers, it’s game time. (Rachel Furnari)

Boys of Summer/Monique Meloche Gallery

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RECOMMENDED

As a whole, “Boys of Summer” presents a case study on the emotionally inhibited psyche of the American male. Zane Lewis’s acrylic cutout of a smiling Obama pushes forward an important question: is this a man or the caricature of a fantasy? In two digital prints, Nick Cave exhibits himself, his face hidden by an ornately decorated ski mask that appears both ominous and tribal at the same time. He appears an exotic, dangerous animal, suggesting how African-American men utilize disguise in order to gain access to respect and recognition. Cave and Obama are different sides of the same coin, reflecting limited avenues of selfhood. Assertions about white men are equally compelling. Joel Ross’ somber portraits of American serial killers reveal a less than cheerful aspect of a repressed culture. James Gobel’s sad and eerie portraits of the gay teddy-bear man in kitsch cowboy garb illustrate how loneliness and the pursuit of a stereotype are symbiotically intertwined. The most expressive and captivating piece is Danish artist Jesper Julst’s two-minute DVCAM installation, “No Man is an Island.” A portly, balding, middle-aged man joyously dances in a town square, amidst disaffected teenagers, while Julst watches on, his face streaked with happy tears. This attempt to free men from Dionysian restraint is both liberating and lighthearted; yet it offers a solution. Julst addresses a universal male need for a healthy outlet, as well as hope for the possibility of one. Dancing in the square to a waltz is not as impractical as it sounds. (Marla Seidell)

Through August 2 at Monique Meloche Gallery, 118 N. Peoria.

Karen Reimer: Profile of the Artist

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Karen Reimer is attracted to the labor-intensiveness of craft and to the question of whether the hand is even necessary in art-making. Reimer jumbles craft and concept into an insane network of thought. She asks, what happens when you place craft within the realms of minimalism or a strictly conceptual practice? Then she thoroughly investigates the relationship between the mind and the body within a closed system. Applying rigid minimalist strategies to soft craft techniques, Reimer creates a system of self-imposed constraints and subsequently lets the system produce “the final result” on its own.

What effect does the mind have on the hand in producing said work? “This whole thing probably goes back to the mind vs. body thing—one of those big Western dualities,” Reimer says. She is interested in observing the breakdown of the walls that divide the distinction between concepts and objects, or thoughts and hands.

Her current exhibition at Monique Meloche gallery, titled “Endless Set,” implements a systematic approach to the handmade. The work consists of a set of pillowcases decorated with prime numbers. Each pillowcase is made of the same number of fabric scraps as the prime number decorating it, such that prime number eleven is appliquéd onto a pillowcase composed of eleven scraps of fabric. The prime number, made of white fabric, is the same inches in length as itself, i.e., prime number eleven is eleven inches long. As the prime numbers get larger than the pillowcases, which are twenty-by-twenty inches each, the excess white fabric is folded back and layered over. As the prime numbers get increasingly larger, they more completely obscure the pillowcase made of increasingly smaller scraps. Therefore, as Reimer states it, she is “decorating pillowcases with conceptual art,” and eventually causing the pillowcase to cease function as pillowcases. She describes the series as “a sort of contest between the immaterial concept of infinity, as symbolized by numbers, and the limitations of the material world.” 

Reimer plans to continue the series until she is no longer physically capable to make the pillowcases according to the system.  She expects the breakdown of the system, the entropy, the lack of disorder, predictability and the decline into disorder to occur at the point where the number of fabric scraps making up the underlying pillowcase will be so large that the scraps will be too tiny to sew together. (Karissa Lang)

Karen Reimer shows at Monique Meloche Gallery, 118 North Peoria, through May 31.

Breakout Artists: Chicago’s next generation of image makers

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By Jason Foumberg, with contributions from Brittany Reilly

The Department of Cultural Affairs and the Chicago Artists’ Coalition report that there are an estimated 80,000 artists and “creative types” in Chicago. So it was an exceedingly difficult decision to feature seven, or about one one-hundredth of one percent of the 80,000. The criteria for inclusion were based loosely on the notion of an emerging artist—youngish, industrious and under-recognized—but as Luke Batten of New Catalogue mentioned, artists are always emerging. True enough. The seven Chicago artists deemed 2008’s Breakouts exhibit a propensity toward change, as if a ceaseless interest in learning new things and playing with new materials are the marks of the contemporary artist. Artists are less and less becoming pigeonholed in their own practice, for everything is available, all the time. No longer is there a need to specialize, unless self-reinvention is a specialty.

Kelly Kaczynski

Kelly Kaczynski has built two mountains that will crash into each other. “I don’t make small things,” remarks Kaczynski as she modestly gestures toward her mountains, each a sixteen-foot-tall kinetic sculpture, a spiraling scaffold of raw lumber and metal armatures. Visitors to the her exhibition at Hyde Park Art Center are asked to ascend the stairs to a stage—there are two of them that face each other, each with its own mountain—and to grab a rope, and pull. Underneath the stage is a pulley system that moves these mountains, as if the person activating the rope is riding plate tectonics. A bridge of pointed arms connects the hulking, twisting mountains. These will slowly dig into each other, pushing on the opposing spines that will buckle, crack and collapse.

It is hoped the collapse will happen in a prescribed way so that the destruction won’t inelegantly devolve past danger. Kaczynski acknowledges the risk factor through careful planning, but also addresses that the success of this mammoth project will be measured in its unsuccessfulness. It’s almost Sisyphean, the amount of sweat and muscle that has gone into building a structure intended to collapse, but the plan isn’t decadent or futile—it’s purposeful. Kaczynski courts impermanence with an air like a Zen koan. Granted, we crave safety and stability, but with a smile and a wink, she presents us a moment to play with destruction.

It’s important for Kaczynski to note that the whole thing takes place on a stage. This is act two in “Olympus Manger,” her multi-scene theatrical production about how we lose ourselves. The plot is simple—things change—and the tension between characters, or the viewers, is pointed. Viewers also performed act one on Kaczynski’s stage at the University of Buffalo’s Art Gallery in 2006. There, viewers could experience the view of a landscape beneath the stage by getting on hands and knees and sticking their head through a hole. This private viewing placed them in an ostrich-like position— head disappeared and butt in the air—onstage, for all to see. If viewers believed they were enjoying their private scenery, then they could also believe they weren’t vulnerable to other viewers’ enjoyment at seeing their vulnerability.

In act two of “Olympus Manger,” Kaczynski bumps up the vulnerability a few degrees. Viewers finding themselves causing destruction by the simple pull of a string might be thrilled at the strength of their own hand. Kaczynski delights in this sort of realization, hoping to spark a moment of clarity or complexity—whichever is lacking. Following the project’s completion, she’ll be teaching a seminar she designed for her students on the subject of failure, an apt topic indeed. (JF)

Kelly Kaczynski, “Olympus Manger, Scene II,” shows at the Hyde Park Art Center, 5020 South Cornell, (773)324-5520, through July 6. www.Hydeparkart.org, www.kellykaczynski.com

New Catalogue

New Catalogue operates as if they were the purveyors of a stock-photography bank. Luke Batten and Jonathan Sadler are the project managers, the photographers and, importantly, they are the clients. Batten and Sadler define the need or the problem and then carry out its photographic solution. The early projects stayed true to the enterprise’s design as an image storehouse by producing generic scenery of trees and college campuses. The conceptual wit and novelty evolved into projects that have become increasingly specific and strange, as if fulfilling a gap in the stock-footage industry: a boy recording ambient sounds in nature for his experimental art film; collegiate blonds posing with BB guns; cheerleaders lost in the woods.

The next step in their progression twisted and inverted the framework of the image bank by producing photographs as illustrations to explicit, rather than generic, narratives. The series “A. Hitler and D. Eckart: Obersalzberg to Hoher Goll” is a photographic journey tracing Hitler’s favorite nature path where the dictator would ruminate on his writings. Variously exhibited at “Loaded Landscapes” at the Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago and at the Prague Biennial, the series of thirty images can be split in any number of ways to see different stories. Without knowing the narrative, though, Hitler’s favorite forest footpath could easily be used to illustrate the idea of serenity, or wilderness tours. There’s no “Hitler was here” signpost within the image, but the artists would always want us to know what we are seeing, reminding us that portions of history are easily lost to the overgrowth of time.

The question of the best way to represent a moment or a place or a person is at stake again in the Dag Hammarskjöld project, a huge series of images tied more to typography and graphic design than photography. Dag Hammarskjöld, former UN Secretary General, was a truly idiosyncratic figure with a multi-dimensional mind, but he becomes stylized in the project to the degree of a minimal sculpture. His biography becomes a set of repeated words from his diary, a basic palette of pink, gray, black and white, and his name is turned into a mantra—Dag Dag Dag. The project isn’t yet finished, so its final form is to be determined. As a portrait of a historic figure, we learn about him through typefaces and compositions, which is to say we learn little. The point of the project may not be a true biography, but a look at how good design contributes the lion’s share of knowledge about a subject. It’s a superficial understanding of the subject, and an apt portrayal of how we consume public figures, as if to say that branded identity is identity.

Similarly, New Catalogue is mining its own past. This summer, draughtsmen will be hired to sketch the entire back catalog, as if retroactively conceptualizing the various projects. What may seem absurd at first is hardly absurd considering that the overarching frame of New Catalogue is to expose our comfort living in proximity to highly stylized fictions.

The latest photographic series, “Tiger Afternoon,” from which “Boy” is featured on the cover of the March/April 2008 issue of Art on Paper magazine, distills an idea about adolescent sexuality by promoting it. If there’s a critique of the adolescent sexuality image-producing machine, it’s definitely hidden within the pleasure of viewing such images.

As a way to think about the role of fictional images within culture, the structure of the stock-photo bank is ingenious. For photographers, creating work in a series is a traditional method. Whereas typologies (say, the Bechers) and documentary footage reveal the subtleties of sameness in everyday life, constructed images are subject to a whole other classification—that of the boardroom and the marketing team. One has to wonder if there will be a time when every idea and crumb of history will be subject to a layout in a style-magazine spread, educational only insofar as appealing to the eye. (JF)

www.newcatalogue.net

Stacie Johnson

Is feng shui, the Chinese practice of harmonious arrangement, vastly different from an artist’s ability to perceive and execute good composition? Is magical thinking, or compulsive, “odd rituals,” a world apart from creativity? Stacie Johnson’s paintings of still-lifes placed “just so” bespeak a subtle collaboration with the world and sensitivity to its inhabitants.

She began painting the familiar interiors of her life (kitchen, hallway, studio) several years ago after experimenting with abstraction. Free-flowing, intuitive painting was a good way to channel a certain kind of energy, but the results never achieved the sense of life-dwelling lightness that she found in objects touched daily. These pictures emit a calmness tempered by controlled placement, logical perhaps only to the artist, yet visible nonetheless. Some of the current pictures concretize this vision of restraint by representing systems of symmetry and fixity, of push and pull. But there’s a trick: they appear casual and spontaneous. Johnson has found a way to be an abstract expressionist by being neither abstract nor expressionistic.

Johnson typically begins a painting by constructing a maquette. So, the scenes are sculptural before they are paintings. These are throwaway objects made of raw materials such as string, pink-insulation material and milk crates. She constructs props into shapes, say, a six-pointed star or a pointy circle composed of a string wound taut through nails in the studio wall. Because her style is loosely trompe-l’oeil, these objects make a very real appearance in the paintings. There’s something ritualistic about the arrangement of the sculptures-come-paintings. Anyone who has listened to the impulse to place a talisman above an entryway will recognize Johnson’s objects as amulets or magic signs. Perhaps they are modernist voodoo idols, poised to guide the artist’s hand through a perfect composition. It takes a tuned eye to recognize the faces that emerge from inanimate objects, and it takes an eye fed on good old superstition to see those faces as friends. Everything can be an omen.

The author John Fante often begins his novels about his experiences as a writer and the struggles of the writing process, from sitting down at the typewriter to dealing with an agent. This isn’t necessarily the content of the story, but a framing tool, as if the other elements of life happen only in context to writing. After all, he presents his life to us in the form of words. So too do Johnson’s paintings begin with the act of painting in order to open a door and lead us into a tale about the artist’s life. Surely Johnson’s paintings are personal, and they often respond to the particular places where they are exhibited, and the people who run that space. The circuitry of painting objects in the painting studio, or painting stuff found in the exhibition space, tells us about Johnson’s special relationship to her practice: it is in concordance with her life. (JF)

Stacie Johnson will show at ThreeWalls Solo, 119 North Peoria, May 16-June 14. www.Three-walls.org, www.staciemayajohnson.com

Mariano Chavez

Mariano Chavez’s universe is populated with trolls, grotesquely gigantic breasts, flowers and cavemen. Certainly there’s a John Waters plot in there somewhere. If it’s inappropriate and embarrassing, chances are that Chavez has captured it. Even bouquets of flowers rendered in pastel seem suspect in the context of Chavez’s body of work—a world of cartoonish ugliness and proud despair.

Growing up in South Texas in a town with only “religion and bars,” a true shit hole, explains Chavez, the nastiness crept through and took center stage in his art as if by destiny. After leaving home with 300 bucks in his pocket and eyes set on high-class Paris, he ended up in Chicago, attended art school, and has since worked at various architectural salvage companies in the city. The warehouse where Chavez works and keeps his studio is fitted out like an architectural butcher shop, with iron grates hanging from the ceiling and ruined ornamental slabs against the walls. It’s a fitting environment for an artist whose process includes scavenging source material, say, Time Life’s pictorial encyclopedias or Internet porn. What many may gloss with a passing interest, Chavez sees material ripe with meaning.

“Children will love it, adults will be terrified,” Chavez says of his new poster design for an art exhibition. The poster features a recurring character from many his other posters, prints and paintings: a drug-eyed floating face with a plump lolling tongue that hangs somehow out both the front and back of its head. This figure’s reappearance represents within Chavez’s body of work what he sees as happening across the visual spectrum—reiterated symbols that provide constant meaning. This includes something as simple as flowers, but also something as strange as the over-sexualized female body. The Venus of Willendorf, for instance, is comparable to Wendy Whoppers, the porn star with impossibly huge breasts. This constant symbol of the female body bloated with sexuality may be viewed differently by various cultures, yet its outline has remained mostly unchanged over centuries.

Chavez’s canvases often scratch at something taboo, although it’s not quite certain what exactly might be the nasty bit. Some are sexually suggestive, while others are racially charged; it’s not clear how or why these might offend, yet they do. Chavez isn’t to blame for creating this nastiness. His collage process pulls images from varied sources, from mass culture to ethnographic surveys. If the art is disgusting, it’s only because that’s what is available.

Chavez has been criticized for not painting his disgustingness with enough beauty, such as a work by John Currin or Lisa Yuskavage. To his credit, it’s easy enough to pull an image of Wendy Whoppers from the Internet. Pixelated, the image is truer to the form we recognize. But many of Chavez’s prints are also hand-colored and do emit a rarefied air, even if they are only concert posters as quickly torn down as they are pasted up. He maintains a respect for artistry if the piece warrants it, and this can mean careful consideration of watercolor atop silkscreen or endless revisions of a print series until he gets it just right. The process of making art is slow; it takes time to ferment, like the link he sees between the prehistoric female idol and the 1980s porn star. Looking again at Wendy Whoppers, Chavez jokes, “There’s nothing to love.” With breasts like weapons, sex becomes terrifying. Life is short; art is long; despair is long, too. (JF)

Mariano Chavez, “May Flowers,” shows at Linda Warren Gallery, 1052 West Fulton Market, (312)432-9500, May 16-June 20. www.Lindawarrengallery.com

Amy Honchell

When Amy Honchell began shopping at Spandex House in Manhattan, her sculptures took on the vibrant colors usually associated with superheroes and exotic dancers. She previously stuck to the basic range of flesh tones available from drugstore pantyhose, and this worked well to suggest the anthropomorphic shapes she was building at the time. For Honchell, spandex opened the door to a series of trampy, psychedelic work. That the stuff could be pinned to a wall and stretched over a space like neon sugar drool amplified its strange associative possibilities. These sculptures transformed architectural spaces into abstract bodily forms, say, an intestinal cavity or a pocket full of eggs. Given that a living organism’s interior body has no color, for there is no light, the folds and flesh walls might as well be granted the beautiful and arbitrary colors provided by the purveyors of Spandex House.

Honchell primarily uses textile and fabric in its various forms. When she had completed her exploration of spandex, darker objects found their way into her hands, along with different shapes and points of inspiration. Most recently, “Purl” is a floor-bound sculpture on view at estudiotres gallery in “Fair Game,” a group exhibition about the transformation of found objects. Honchell had come into possession of hundreds of pounds of donated garments, all from a single source—a recently deceased avid sewer and quilter. The trove of fabric took some time to sort, and it comprised, according to Honchell, a “forty-year survey of the American plaid,” a vernacular print through and through. Unlike the fantastical stories told by spandex, these plaids, along with age-old denim and other sewing castoffs, represented for Honchell an opportunity to bring a myriad of viewers to the work. Strangeness gave way to the common and the familiar. The dusty, fading plaids speak in a hushed tone. Like being in the presence of grandmothers, we must crane our necks in their direction, and be attentive, and maybe we will learn a thing or two.

A close viewing of “Purl” reveals a stitched line that gives each head-sized pod a swirling texture and also holds the layers of cloth together. These layers are dense; they could well be thickets of memory, their soft folds of information giving up antique gems to digging hands. “There’s something beyond what we see,” says Honchell, nodding to the metaphor of memory.

At the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where Honchell teaches in the progressive Fiber and Material Studies program, cloth and garments are often subject to political, philosophic and feminist narratives. Honchell notes that these are important histories, but today’s textiles are not as gender-specific as they were years ago. She prefers that viewers access her sculpture from a poetic and personal entry. (JF)

Amy Honchell shows at estudiotres gallery, 5205 North Clark, (773)271-0533, through May 2. She will also show new work at Contemporary Art Workshop, 542 West Grant Place, (773)472-4004, May 16-June 20. www.amyhonchell.com, www.estudiotres.com, www.contemporaryartworkshop.org.

Carrie Schneider

For two weeks this past January, Carrie Schneider and her brother resided in a cottage on Utö, the southernmost island of Finland in the Archipelago Sea. The quaint island is populated year-round, with a whopping five incoming and outgoing boats per week. There, the siblings were the two-person cast and crew for Schneider’s first 16mm film. “We’re close,” Carrie says of her brother. “He is amazing to work with, and very tolerant.” Those familiar with Schneider’s body of work may recall her brother as the recurring character in the 2006-2007 photographic series, “Derelict Self,” in which the artist explores the complexities of singularity and selfhood in meticulously arranged and irresistible compositions. In these works, Schneider positions herself as a second ghostly figure—one that is visibly present and manifesting, but not existing. The resulting relation between the bodies is fearlessly intimate, peculiar and unnatural. The atmosphere is solemnly cool and solid, somehow transcending melodrama and sentiment.

In a similar spirit, Schneider’s 2006 video series, “Family Videos,” include members of her family reenacting typical child-parent or brother-sister moments with the now-adult artist, such as “Dad Washing My Hair” or “On Mom’s Lap.”

After another several months making work in Finland and studying at Kuvataideakatemia (KUVA, The Finnish Academy of Fine Arts), via a Fulbright Fellowship, Carrie will return to Chicago to prepare for her October solo exhibition at Monique Meloche gallery, who newly represents the artist.

Schneider’s time at KUVA has allowed her to work closely with female Nordic video artists and filmmakers, including Eija-Liisa Ahtila, Liisa Roberts and Salla Tykkä. Tykkä, whom Schneider assisted on location in Helsinki on her latest film, is a particular influence on the artist.

Schneider’s keen and concise approach to exploring subject matter was developed while studying in the MFA program at the School of the Art Institute.

Two photographic series that employ non-Schneider subjects were completed in 2007 during the artist’s summer residency at Skowhegan, Maine. “Portrait of the Artist in His/Her Studio” captures young artists in the residency-style studio cube in awkward positions of surrender. “Asleep” shows figures reclined on a hillside or in a field, this time in less contrived positions and miniaturized against the vastness and warmth of nature.

Schneider’s 2007 c-print “Las Bebidas (The Drinks)” has deservedly received enough attention to hold a place as the contemporary version of the famed Velázquez painting it is based on, “Las Meninas,” and was recently added to the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago, along with “Untitled (Library)” from the series “Derelict Self.”

At the time of publication, Schneider will have just returned from another island off the coast of Finland, where she was finishing a second film in preparation for her first international solo exhibition at Galleria FAFA, Helsinki. Titled “Elaborate Flirtations,” the exhibition will also include Schneider’s photographs and video, what she prefers to call “lens-based’” media. This new body of work incorporates the “deceptively blank yet psychologically loaded Finnish landscape” and “revels in the contention between hot blood and cold land.”

For a little bit of Carrie Schneider before October, head to the Chicago Cultural Center this weekend to view “Three Hours Between Planes,” an exhibition that Schneider co-curated and that features artists based in Chicago and in Leipzig, Germany. The exhibition will travel next month to the Spinnerei complex in Leipzig. (BR)

Carrie Schneider will show at Monique Meloche, 118 North Peoria, in October, 2008. www.carrieschneider.net, www.moniquemeloche.com.

William J. O’Brien

William J. O’Brien has maintained his practice in Chicago since 2001, in a studio not unlike Francis Bacon’s famed South Kensington room filled with mountains of the artist’s materials and visual sources, the variety of items evidence of the maker’s range of methods. Should a team of preservationists ever care to take an inventory of O’Brien’s studio, as they did the late painter’s, they’d end up with lists including fabrics, Xerox prints, dishware, markers, furniture limbs, ceramic fragments, strings and mounds of clay. Though not an entirely uncommon mix of the found, the made, the old and the new, it is no wonder that central to O’Brien’s thought-process is the translation of a project from studio to gallery, and of the transformation of object from defunct to engaging.

A friend to his local and coastal peers, and a participant in a recent panel discussion with contemporaries Melanie Schiff and Shane Huffman, William (Bill) exudes a candor, offbeat optimism and a tender sense of humor that is present in his artwork in every way.

Incorporating colored pencil, ink, fiber, ceramics and mixed media, O’Brien’s installations grow out of drawings that crave for further dimensions, texture and the immediacy of touch. Though his practice is often related to appropriation and use of the found object, O’Brien’s work is nothing if not absolutely inventive.

O’Brien’s earlier work in 2004-2005, best exemplified at his “12×12” MCA show, was also installation-based, but more inclined to entirely takeover the space with lo-fi video, cluttered collage and a heavy use of overt homoerotic imagery. Though inextricable from his approach, the work seems to have moved on from these styles—namely, the erotic—to a less-overloaded, but still hyperactive, sensibility and responsiveness.

In a way, O’Brien acts as a huntsman and archaeologist of artifacts and physical remains without caring to relate them to the concerned human party, but rather linking the objects to a new history of themselves.

O’Brien’s contribution at the Gladstone Gallery group show, “Makers and Modelers: Works in Ceramic,” was a display of found and made objects on an old country table from Jan’s Antiques in Chicago. Despite the attention it received in the press, O’Brien explains that he was dissatisfied with the piece when it was finished, and more intrigued by the transition of the items from his studio to the gallery space. Perhaps this is his position with any “finished” product, driven instead by the opportunity to witness the evolution of the object and finding a way to act on first thoughts or unconsciousness.

After O’Brien completed his MFA in Fiber and Material Studies at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2005, it didn’t take long for Shane Campbell Gallery to show interest, fully introducing O’Brien into their program last year with a solo exhibition titled, very fittingly, “the axis mundi.” Previously, the gallery had included O’Brien’s work the group exhibition “Modern Primitivism” in 2006.

O’Brien has been a favorite of smaller Chicago galleries, non-profits and young curators, his career seemingly growing up alongside these peers and supporters. 1/Quarterly, Open End Gallery, ThreeWalls gallery, Diamonds on Archer and Booster and Seven have all served as sites for his drawings and installations.

Currently his work is on view alongside Andy Coolquit and Frank Haines at Krinzinger Projekte, the large project space of Krinzinger Gallery, Vienna that has been presenting young artists since 2002. (BR)

www.wobwobwob.com, www.shanecampbellgallery.com

Review: Kendell Carter/Monique Meloche Gallery

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RECOMMENDED

. Kendell Carter’s new installation at Monique Meloche is titled “Common Ground,” seemingly in reference to Carter’s shrewd hybridization of traditional artistic and craft styles with the vernacular imagery and objects of hip-hop culture. Carter has done an excellent job of transforming the gallery with the addition of traditional wainscoting, tagged walls and chandeliers constructed from clustered Kangol hats, fat shoe laces and do-rags; all of which create an inviting scene for the centerpiece of the exhibition: the custom furniture. Carter’s sly amalgamation of “bling and baroque” (the title for one of the ink drawings on view) has its most sophisticated realization in his original furniture which combines classic design (Wassily and wing back chairs) with well-calculated contemporary alterations: in this case, “puffy” jacket upholstery and the coy addition of a sweatshirt hoodie to the back of each chair. Other pieces, such as gold plated “Mark” coat racks and metalized milk crate ottomans complete the scene. While these are evocative and even tense cultural cross-breeds, the entire effect is somewhat diluted by the pervading atmosphere of a high-end sneaker store (see Alfie Rivington Club, NYC). This is undoubtedly part of the artist’s intention, but it threatens to mask the subtlety of Carter’s wit and sociological interventions. (Rachel Furnari)

Through April 19 at Monique Meloche Gallery, 118 N. Peoria.

Review: Cindy Loehr/Monique Meloche Gallery

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RECOMMENDED

Fuel for “Constant Light” consists of SIX tall, wing-like statues arranged in an elliptical halo that fill the main area of the gallery. Although there is grace in the upward curves of the forms to a body encircled within, upon closer attention there are unavoidable formal problems. To avoid idolatry by suggesting beauty rather than embodying beauty is one thing, but the gap-filled laminated plywood seems unintentionally sloppy and disrupts the potential for grander spiritual contemplation. Loehr is far more successful with the audio that accompanies the piece, a spiritual song speaking of “power and prayer” inspired by the poetry of Peter O’Leary. In the rear gallery, “Inward Generator #1” is a neat afghan-sized poly-satin quilt composed of images of light and arranged in a generally circular pattern to, again, inspire a centrifugal moment of introspection. More work is installed in the back office of the gallery, but serious formal distractions arise again amidst the clerical detritus. The works intend to be optimistic, and for that it is all that much more admirable. Yet, as a whole, the show speaks more to the frustrations concerning contemporary object making and spirituality rather than the sweet communication between god and angels of light. (Lisa Larson-Walker)

Through March 8 at Monique Meloche Gallery, 118 N. Peoria.