FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
The Anya and Andrew Shiva Gallery
John Jay College of Criminal Justice proudly presents the exhibition

Politicizing Space
Curated by Charlotta Kotik February 2, 2017 – March 31, 2017
Exhibition Opening Reception: February 1st from 5:30 – 7:30 PM

The architecture and art of the urban space can be used to control the lives of its inhabitants; they can restrain their movements and install hierarchies beneficial to those in power. The eleven artists in Politicizing Space critique and subvert these purportedly aesthetic and artistic gestures by reinterpreting the symbolic mechanisms of control. Also under consideration is the age-old question of the balance of power between the art object and the viewer and the inherent competition for the domination of the given locale.

The chain link fences in the work of Paul Anthony Smith are a direct reference to the intent to posses and to dominate. The formal beauty of the presentation only underscores the clarity of the message – there is a danger in trespassing or any other attempt to usurp part of a “claimed” space. Similarly the traffic signs in the work of Filipe Cortez deal with places we are forbidden to access and the ease and simplicity by which the movements of urban residents can be manipulated and controlled. The city environment can be harsh and defensive; implements both physical and legal are created to guard the possession of space. These real and imagined tools are referenced in the work of Lan Tuazon. Her series Parking Lot Landscapes (2010) addresses control through property. Public or private parking spaces are some of the prime possessions in the city’s structure and as such are also an embodiment of ownership and nascent strife.

Nowhere is power expressed more acutely than in the equestrian sculptures serving as the symbolic apex of public spaces worldwide. However the mighty ones, and their monuments, are frequently subverted by the course of events, as in the case of the ill-fated gilt-lead sculpture
of George III on horseback at Bowling Green in downtown Manhattan. In the work of William Corwin, Poor Dead King (2017), it becomes a parable of such fate.

Complementing the look from above is the view from below: the unenviable position of living underground and creating the most basic primal structure for sheer survival. Andrew Ross’s Secret Lives of Mole People (2017) addresses the issues of total disenfranchisement, and more importantly, the rhetoric of the demonization of “the other.”

Curiosity may have doomed the feline, but servitude killed the dog. Chained in the entryway of Pompeii home when Vesuvius erupted in 79 AD, a dog struggled and ultimately asphyxiated under layers of fine ash that in turn perfectly preserved shape of its body. As the organic material disintegrated, the form became a mold that allowed Allan McCollum’s cast The Dog From Pompeii, 1990/91. The work epitomizes the devastation of a cataclysmic disaster in an urban
environment.
Several artists reinterpret classical and pre-modern art tropes. Carin Riley’s Caryatid Wall

Drawings (2017) reference the sculptures of female figures used in classical Greek architecture as structural support. The support can read not only as architectural, but in a larger sense it also functions as a metaphor of female importance in Ancient Greece. Similarly the interest in classical themes of balance and symmetry informs Reverb No.13 (2016) by Kara Rooney. Her pieces, often guided by interest in history, linguistics and literature, can also be confrontational in the complexity of meaning and competition for viewers’ space. David Goodman’s Monolith (2017) deals with properties of painting as well as sculpture and with a scale that reaches architectural proportions. It claims space in way analogous to a monumental entryway and engages the concept of the triumphal arch and/or the gateway. In her large drawings Frauke Schlitz investigates the phenomena of architecture and topography and the relationships that develop while we perceive, or mentally navigate, through the man-made spaces. Lauren Clay, like Goodman and Schlitz, engages with architecture. She generates surrogate surfaces by enlarging marbleized pigment patterns and laminating them onto existing walls and architectural details. These are transformed into panoramic vistas full of twists and turns of an almost psychedelic nature.

As we are entering a political climate of self-mythologizing and interpretation of events bearing little or no reference to actual history or data, we are also witnessing the return of architectural and urban strategies that reinforce class-structures and inequality. Events in the twentieth century, as well as the very recent ones, remind us that politically minded contortions and suppression of the once thriving metropolis are not relegated to history. We have to be vigilant in the pursuit of rational management of resources and suppression of aggressive behavior so that a similar fate does not befall cities worldwide. Art can be an important tool in such efforts.

Acknowledgments

This exhibition, and the accompanying publication, would not have been possible without the extraordinarily generous cooperation of William Corwin during all stages of this project. Thank you for sharing excellent insights and the time devoted to the various aspects of this exhibition.

William Pangburn, director of the Anya and Andrew Shiva Gallery, responded with great amounts of patience to many special requests. I am truly grateful for his understanding and patience.

I also want to thank Roberto Visani, Associate Professor of Art, for his unfailing help with this project.

And to Sam Tsao at Petzel Gallery, Scott Zieher at ZieherSmith, Silas Shabelewska at Art3 and Jack and Dolly Geary at Geary Contemporary.

For more information please contact:

The Anya and Andrew Shiva Gallery John Jay College of Criminal Justice 860 11th Avenue
New York, NY 10019 gallery@jjay.cuny.edu 212-237-1439

http://www.shivagallery.org
Gallery Hours: 1- 5 PM, M – F

About John Jay College of Criminal Justice: An international leader in educating for justice, John Jay College of Criminal Justice of The City University of New York offers a rich liberal arts and professional studies curriculum to upwards of 15,000 undergraduate and graduate students from more than 135 nations. In teaching, scholarship and research, the College approaches justice as an applied art and science in service to society and as an ongoing conversation about fundamental human desires for fairness, equality and the rule of law.

For more information, visit http://www.jjay.cuny.edu.