 WADE GUYTON, SETH PRICE, JOSH
SMITH, KELLEY WALKER
8 APRIL - 28 MAY 2006
They squeeze canvases through ink-jet printers, paint
over digitally altered images from the media with chocolate, scan freshly
chopped fruits and vegetables, gold plate recycling emblems which are
transformed into sculptures. In a variety of ways they intervene in
digitally recorded material from art history, the media and advertising,
overtax the concept of authorship by making exaggerated use of their
own name for paintings, collages, drawings and countless photocopies
of them, and cite from art history in the form of reliefs molded into
cheap plastic. They sample music, text and image without identifying
the respective author, return materials from art history and literature
as digital print copies into public circulation, and they torment every
conceivable, employable technology of our everyday digital lives such
as reproduction technology by combining them with unsuitable materials
and equally unsuitable applications.
Wade Guyton (1972, Indiana), Seth Price (1973, Jerusalem), Josh Smith
(1976, Tennessee) and Kelley Walker (1969, Georgia) live in New York.
Referring to their works collectively by using the word “they” is
deliberately misleading since the works by the four artists not only
differ visually but also vary visibly in their individual approaches.
The four artists do not form an artists’ group, even though Wade
Guyton and Kelley Walker have often organised joint exhibitions and
all four artists realise joint projects in ever varying constellations – often
complemented by other creative persons and theoreticians. Take for
instance “Continuous Project”, an ongoing New York collective
who re-start discussing historic material such as pioneering art history
magazines but also the writings by dubious historical figures; or the
Web site “Distributed History” that Seth Price operates,
which makes accessible his own selected projects as those of other
people in a kind of cooperative meta level.
As such, the joint exhibition by the four artists at Kunsthalle Zürich
is neither a group exhibition with an underlying theme nor a collaboration
initiated by a curator but focuses on the respective identity of the
four artists: each presents himself with a comprehensive collection
of new works, while the details of the presentation in Kunsthalle Zürich
are worked out on site, taking up and experimenting with the classic
concept of the installation.
Wade Guyton’s works are based on a penetration of the everyday
by appropriating from art history, especially the aesthetic and ideological
approaches of Constructivism and Concrete Art, which holds a very evident
tradition in Switzerland. He prints over materials from art history
books, “paints” by having printing machines print out digitally
altered material on canvas or translates popular everyday design into
sculptures.
Seth Price presses art history into packaging materials, repeats and
samples materials from art, music, literature and film to eccentric
new shapes both in regard to their material and their medial implementation.
In addition to videos, which are created without a camera, he arranges
digital material in every conceivable form, in order to address topics
of distribution and identification.
Kelley Walker also uses existing material from art, the media and advertising:
brand aestheticism, media images, everyday branding are contaminated
with reality and degraded in his works, for instance when he re-works
digitally altered heterogeneous material by painting it over with chocolate.
What all of them have in common is a Post-Pop attitude that is arguably
capable of lending all the ‘things’ of the world an individual
and autonomous status of the real. A re-issuing of Pop using other
means, namely those of tracing the materialised (but also perverted)
influence of artistic strategies through advertising, the media and
the everyday.
Josh Smith, whose works deal obsessively with his own (universal) name,
which he features as the sole iconography of his paintings, drawings
and collages, and which he replicates into infinity with his equally
obsessive practice of photocopying, operates in this artistic field
like the proverbial reverse of the coin, yet still addresses the same
topic: All four artists address a reality, which is just as much formed
by the sublimation strategies of art and its marketing as by the images
which are spread through the Internet and digital copying. This might
possibly result in a different form of cooperation, which is based
precisely on the overlapping and shifting terms of authorship and copyright,
a so called collective creativity, which rests on the appropriation
of available reality free of ideology and hierarchy.
Kunsthalle Zürich thanks:
Präsidialdepartement
der Stadt Zürich, Luma Stiftung, Kanton
Zürich
Event:
Saturday, 8 April, 11 am:
Brunch and a lecture by Sturtevant at Kunsthalle Zürich. Following:
Sturtevant in conversation with the artists from the current exhibition.
Further events accompanying the exhibition Guyton, Price, Smith and
Walker are being planed.
Please check our website www.kunsthallezurich.ch
for up-to-date information.
Catalogue:
For the exhibtion a catalogue will be designed by Continuous Project
/ Joseph Logan. There will be numerous illustrations of the artists’s
works and texts by by John Kessler, Fia Backstrom, Josh Smith, Johanna
Burton, Bettina Funcke, Jay Sanders and Beatrix Ruf.
Our education and
tour program is supported by Swiss
Re
Further information and images available on request by telephone 0041
44 272 15 15 or e-mail info@kunsthallezurich.ch
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