The ArtCat calendar is closed as of December 31, 2012. Please visit Filterizer for art recommendations.


ARTCAT



Benjamin Edwards, We

Greenberg Van Doren Gallery
730 Fifth Avenue, 212-445-0444
Midtown
November 17, 2006 - January 12, 2007
Reception: Friday, November 17, 6 - 8 PM
Web Site


The title and impetus for the show is the historic dystopian novel of the same name by the Russian revolutionary Yevgeny Zamyatin. Written in 1920, but not published until 1988, it takes the form of the diary of state mathematician named D-503, who, to his shock, experiences the most disruptive emotion imaginable: love for another human being. At once satirical and sobering We depicts a totalitarian and conformative state, with free will as the cause of a society’s unhappiness. Its literary and imagistic innovations include futuristic visions of buildings, where everything is made of glass or transparent materials, so that everyone is constantly visible.

In his exhibition We, Edwards continues to hold a mirror to contemporary society, reflecting it back as hallucinatory and visionary landscapes. Since his last show, he has transitioned to using oil paints from acrylic, enriching the palette and texture of his work. While he continues to deploy a seemingly inexhaustible dictionary of corporate identities and image branding, the artist has also incorporated numerous images from disparate sources, both high and low, found and invented. These include historical designs and structures of city buildings and plans (including those never built and/or destroyed); hybrid figures or `automatons’; and the atmospheric effects found in the `celebrated’ American Edens of Thomas Kincade and Thomas Cole. As in Zamyatin’s novel, Edwards’s new work is composed and layered with transparencies and shifts in figure and ground. The artist has stated his painting is a “vast expanse of all that is outside the crushing force of the present moment, antithesis of the mundane, forever relegated to a lost past or an unrealized future, but all in the mind, individual or cultural. It is a graveyard, a museum, an ideology, a memory (sweet or painful) a wish, a fear, a hope…”

www.flickr.com
Have photos of this show? Tag them with artcal-3442 to see them here.