The Fag Show

2000

Signed and numbered (41/100) on certificate, verso

R-type print

20 x 20 inches

Sold.

For her solo exhibition “The Fag Show” (London, Sadie Coles, 2000), Lucas explored her obsession with cigarettes as a material for art, suggesting the connection between smoking and sexually obsessive activity. Lucas wrote: “I first started smoking when I was nine. And I first started trying to make something out of cigarettes because I like to use relevant kind of materials. I’ve got these cigarettes around so why not use them. There is this obsessive activity of me sticking all these cigarettes on the sculptures, and obsessive activity could be viewed as a form of masturbation. It is a form of sex, it does come from the same sort of drive, And there’s so much satisfaction in it. When you make something completely covered in cigarettes and see it as solid it looks incredibly busy and it’s a bit like sperm or genes under the microscope.”

Sarah Lucas (b. 1962)

A Young British Artist (YBA), Sarah Lucas has been satirizing British culture, sexuality, and gender stereotypes since the early 1990s. Often utilizing found objects, she makes confrontational, bawdy sculptures, installations, photographs, and mixed media works on paper. Lucas is also known for her self-portraits.

Aida Edemariam of The Guardian writes, “Lucas was the wildest of the Young British Artists, partying hard and making art that was provocative and at times genuinely shocking.” Lucas’ first solo exhibitions, both in 1992, were titled “The Whole Joke” and “Penis Nailed to a Board.” In 1996, she was the subject of a BBC documentary, “Two Melons and a Stinking Fish.” Lucas’s work has exhibited internationally, and has appeared in several major surveys of new British art at institutions including the Walker Arts Center, Minneapolis; The Royal Academy of Arts; and Tate Britain, London.

Jill Skupin Burkholder (b. 1956)

Jill Skupin Burkholder is a photographer and artist, known for her use of alternative photography processes such as bromoil printing. She began working with photography in 1985 and studied both analog and digital photography, all the while experimenting with various alternative techniques. Burkholder’s prints have been exhibited at SohoPhoto, New York City; FOTO&PHOTO photography festival, Milan; Garrison Art Center, Garrison, New York; the Center for Photography at Woodstock; the Gallery at R&F in Kingston, New York; the Texas Photographic Society’s traveling Alternative Processes Exhibition; and others. Her work is in the permanent collections of The Museum of Fine Art, Houston, Texas, and The Harry Ransom Humanities Center in Austin, Texas.

James Wojcik

James Wojcik graduated from the prestigious Art Center College of Design in 1981 with a B.F.A. in photography. He has exhibited his work at Diechtorhallen Hamburg, Galerie Isabelle Bongard, La Gallerie Maeght, and the Palais de Chaillot for Exposition “Gitanes” in Paris, as well as Bonni Benrubi Gallery and Paolo Baldacci Gallery in New York City. His photographs were featured in “Blindspot” (Issues #6 and #20). In 1998, he won a coveted Alfred Eisenstaedt Award for magazine photography for the cover of “Twice Magazine,” and was nominated the following year for a ten-page story he shot for “House and Garden Magazine.”

Vadim Gushchin

Vadim Gushchin is known primarily for his photographic still life work. He graduated from the Moscow Energy Institute in 1986. He has been shooting photographs since 1988. He lives and works in Moscow. Since 1991 he has had more than thirty solo exhibitions.

Serpa #0753

2010

Signed and numbered on label, verso

Archival pigment print

58 x 64.5 inches
(Edition of 3)

41 x 45.7 inches
(Edition of 5)

20 x 22.2 inches
(Edition of 4)

Contact gallery for prices.

Horse

October 18 – December 21, 2012

Opening reception:
Thursday, October 18, 2012
6:00 to 8:00 p.m.

ClampArt is very pleased to announce “Jill Greenberg: Horse,” the artist’s seventh solo show at the gallery. The exhibition coincides with the release of Greenberg’s monograph titled “Horses” from Rizzoli (Hardcover, 224 pages, 13 x 9.4 inches, $55), which includes an essay by the artist and a text from renowned writer, A. M. Homes.

At the beginning, the project represented Greenberg’s return to her original muse. As a young girl she was obsessed with drawing, painting, and photographing horses. As Greenberg’s young daughter also picked up an interest in the animals and began riding, she started thinking about the bit, halter, and bridle in terms of how these animals are harnassed and controlled. Greenberg soon found an article by a British academic who compared the ways horses function in society to the way women historically have been oppressed, and he included an illustration of a female wearing a “scold’s bridle,” which was a medieval punishment for mouthy women. Greenberg, still enmeshed in her feminist series, “Glass Ceiling,” began thinking about horses in an entirely new light.

In depicting these animals, Greenberg continually addresses issues of sexuality. She vacillates between highlighting the animals’ masculinity and femininity. “In my essay [for the book],” explains Greenberg, “I explore how the photography relates to gender issues and whether horses are perceived as feminine or masculine,” says Greenberg. “I ended up getting to the place where they’re both.” Phallic necks and muscles are, in the end, balanced out with soft, pastel colors and tones.

In contrast to her previous series of monkeys and bears, these photographs do not rely on countenance or anthropomorphization. “If the monkeys and bears series were portraits of animals as actors, these are pictures of horses as if they were supermodels,” explains Greenberg. “It’s about figure studies and their physiques and their silhouettes.” Form, rather than expression, guides the work overall.

This series is also unique with regard to the freedom Greenberg allowed herself in terms of postproduction work. Greenberg sets her work apart from that of many traditional photographers by allowing her own hand to play a more prominent role in the imagery. Using “digital painting” techniques, as she terms it, she layers a variety of unexpected colors to the images.

ClampArt will also be partnering with Milk Gallery and Rizzoli for a book launch on Friday, October 19th, from 7.00 to 10.00 p.m., and a three-day exhibition through Sunday, October 21st. Milk Gallery is located at 450 West 15th Street, New York City.

Jill Greenberg’s fine art has appeared in numerous prestigious publications such as the New Yorker, Washington Post, Boston Globe, New York Sun, Blink, Harper’s Magazine, Art Ltd, and French Photo. Her photographs have been exhibited in a great number of gallery and museum exhibitions all around the world, and her work is represented in such permanent collections as the Portland Art Museum, Oregon; The Kemper Museum, Kansas City, Missouri; National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC; Southeast Museum of Photography, Daytona Beach, Florida; among others.

For more information please contact Brian Paul Clamp, Director, or visit the gallery’s website at www.clampart.com. ClampArt is open Tuesday through Saturday, from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Scott Daniel Ellison | “Mouth of a Cave,” Konsten

Translated from Konsten.net:

The artist run gallery, Candyland has a nice little painting exhibition by American Scott Daniel Ellison, until 14 October. He calls the exhibition “Mouth of a Cave.” Ellison’s background is a MAF in photography from the State University of New York, and then some time as an assistant to Sol LeWitt. Following his time as an assistant, he began to paint. While he plays music and has recently released the single Raccoon Song from the album Norther Girl. He collects photographs of people who have raccoons as pets, which he sees as an expression of one’s own desire to own something wild and strange from the forest.

View the original article

Browse all of Scott Daniel Ellison’s work at ClampArt

Stephen Wilkes | “China’s factories represent the past, present, and future,” Quartz

Gloria Dawson from Quartz writes:

Ever since Stephen Wilkes wrangled his way into a a school trip to China in 1978 the country has been on his mind. At the time, he remembers everyone in China rode bikes, and the only colors he saw were the greens and blues of the military-style uniforms that most people wore.

In 1978 Wilkes was a college student in the US at Syracuse University in New York, studying at the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications. The trip was planned for another school at the University, but Wilkes convinced the powers-that-be that the historic journey needed to be documented. It was two years after Chairman Mao Zedong’s death and the end of the cultural revolution. Wilkes was brought along as a photographer.

View the original article

View Stephen Wilkes’ series, “China”

Browse all of Stephen Wilkes’ work at ClampArt