Nate Lowman Downtown Is A Construct 001

Downtown Is A Construct

Nate Lowman

日期
08.02.2016 | 02.04.2016
画廊
London
文件
OTHER

Massimo De Carlo is proud to announce that on Monday the 8h of February it will be presenting Downtown Is A Construct, a new exhibition by the American artist Nate Lowman.

Situated by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission as somewhere easterly of West, westerly of Broadway, northerly of Vesey, and of course, below Canal, the Tribeca district of downtown Manhattan lies in a zone previously established for 18th century farm and residential use before being developed for commercial enterprise in the following half-century. Edifices used to house industrial stores of thread, fabric, produce, spices, or wrapping paper were built of stone, with facades often covered in cast iron and affixed with metal window shutters to prevent the spread of fires. As industrial activity disappeared from the city in the 20th century, these huge buildings, with their high ceilings, tall windows and wide-open floor plans, were left empty.

Rediscovered in the 1970s by a generation of artists who took up residence in the then-desolate neighbourhood, the buildings were eventually marked for preservation by the city after lobbying from a committee of these residents. Within the West, East, North, South and South Extension Tribeca Historic Districts designated between 1991 and 2002 are buildings that retain many vestiges of the past, being governed by regulations that disallow alteration of their historic features. Many of the aging original residential artist “settlers” of the area still live in lofts bought or leased at rent-controlled rates in the 1970s and 80s at addresses that have since increased astronomically in real estate value, as the neighbourhood has developed into a chic, status-conscious area known for relatively safe and quiet streets, high-end amenities, and an exclusive population high in celebrities and the uber-wealthy.

The works in “Downtown Is A Construct,” Nate Lowman’s third solo exhibition at Massimo De Carlo in London, derive from one of the few sections of his Tribeca loft studio (a weathered civic landmark building at the furthest mid-eastern border of the East Tribeca Historic District) not in perpetual use for painting, cleaning, storage, or planning: the ceiling. Conveying exposed wires, pipes, and modern track lighting that overlaps the 19th century decorative tin ceiling tiles (another historic fireproofing measure and popular low- cost American design innovation that served as a fashionable alternative to the costly Victorian ornamental plaster ceilings of the time), the images are grainy and high contrast, rendered in black dots that look as if they had been printed rather than painted onto the white linen surfaces. Some works depict the ceiling at an illusionistic 1:1 ratio and many are large enough to activate a type of spatial perception more often associated with sculpture - or architecture - than contemporary painting.

Upon entering the first room of the exhibition the viewer is met by three paintings that each represent the ceiling of an unoccupied space in Worth Street. In the second room four large depict the ceiling of Nate Lowman’s studio in Franklin Street.

Although faithfully rendered with perfect, photographic (albeit low-resolution) execution, the images remain spectral and contingent. With their delicate, unprimed linen supports and painted dot technique that leaves the canvas as full of negative space as with paint, they resonate with the frequency of gaps. The rampant development that endlessly consumes and reconfigures Manhattan is stalled by historic preservation, resulting in pockets of untapped value in a city that compulsively maximizes profit across every inch of time and space. Anomalously, tendentiously halting the march of time and the redistribution of space along the lines of the highest bottom line, the negative spaces of Manhattan serve an alien purposelessness in this most purposeful of cities.

Nate Lowman

内特·洛曼1979年生于美国内华达州拉斯维加斯,目前工作居住在美国纽约。


纽约艺术家内特·洛曼的作品关注艺术和社会中权力、美与暴力的结合。不同主题总是嵌入到与媒介紧密联系的关系中,包括精妙的技术,例如模仿丝网的点画,以及形状复杂的手工拉伸画布。他的创作跨越绘画、印刷,和雕塑,通过挪用并重置预先存在的图像,创造出具有象征意义的作品,反映了许多当代问题,例如大众消费主义、名人流行文化与暴力。


内特·洛曼的作品被众多机构收藏,包括:奥尔布赖特·诺克斯艺术馆,纽约;阿斯楚普费恩利现代艺术博物馆,奥斯陆;蓬皮杜艺术中心,巴黎;马西亚诺艺术基金会,洛杉矶;大都会艺术博物馆,纽约;斯德哥尔摩当代美术馆,斯德哥尔摩;纽约现代艺术博物馆,纽约;古根海姆博物馆,纽约;惠特尼美国艺术博物馆,纽约。

Ritratto Nate Lowman