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ARTCAT



Skylar Fein

C24 Gallery
514 West 24th Street, (646)416-6300
Chelsea
September 13 - October 27, 2012
Reception: Thursday, September 13, 6 - 8 PM
Web Site


C24 Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of new works by New Orleans-based artist Skylar Fein. The exhibition will be on view from September 13 through October 27, 2012, with an opening reception on Thursday, September 13 from 6 – 8pm. This will be the artist’s first solo gallery exhibition in New York and will present a new series of politically inspired works that will include paintings, sculptures and prints. A conversation with the artist and Dan Cameron, Chief Curator of the Orange County Museum of Art, will take place on Thursday, October 25 at 7:00pm.

Skylar Fein’s work is inspired by his interest in various forms of social revolution that range from political figures and music to fringe cultures. He often employs found materials from his current home of New Orleans to illustrate the individuals he views as heroic for having gone against the status quo. Fein’s visual language frequently incorporates appropriated imagery and simple graphics taken from the mainstream or sub-cultures, in order to spark curiosity in the viewer about his historical and cultural discoveries.

For his first solo exhibition at C24 Gallery the artist will present new work that includes collages, prints on bed sheets, and paintings. In a series entitled Beckett at War, Fein turns to Samuel Beckett’s involvement with antifascist activities during the Second World War for inspiration. When the Nazis entered Paris, the Irish playwright fled to the south where he entered the Resistance. Fein’s new work combines factual and fictional histories, suggested as evidence of this part of Beckett’s life that he refused to talk about.

Also featured in the exhibition will be a series of paintings based on memorabilia from the American punk scene of the 1970-80s and other works that use early Modernism as a starting point to address topics such as fascism, sex and boredom, which the artist likens to “Suprematism on poppers.”

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