Leo Koenig Inc. Projekte
541 West 23rd Street, 1 212 334 9255
Chelsea
June 5 - July 11, 2009
Reception: Friday, June 5, 6 - 8 PM
Web Site
PROJEKTE is pleased to announce as its inaugural exhibition, a two person show of works by Adrian Meraz and Anke Weyer entitled “Blind Buzzard”.
In native American lore, Buzzards help to construct and purify the world and they are universally seen as an adroit and efficient scavenger. Blind Buzzard on the other hand, evokes a comic/tragic familiar whose skill set could be hampered or surprisingly enhanced by a distinct disadvantage. A parable for absurdity and incongruence, Blind Buzzard extracts grace from disorientation.
Adrian Meraz’ impossibly delicate sculptures defy their foundation. Evoking a complexity that reaches beyond the simple materials that he has used, the structures seemed to have willed themselves into being. Popsicle sticks, toothpicks balsa wood, cardboard and string are wrought into precarious edifices. Meraz works address the immovable constructs of materiality while considering the tenuous and fragile nature of that materiality. Meraz states “I am interested in the simplicity of materials as an aggregate for meta-history, subtext, a channeling device, a monster language. Each piece, in some ways, is a bastard community constructed to engage a more mental navigation via its smaller spacial makeup. I am interested in the work as a set of images that the viewer “maps,” and how this navigation within the object explores liminality.” Adrian Meraz holds a BFA from Otis College of Art and Design and an MFA from Yale School of Art, Department of Sculpture. He has had a solo exhibition at the Santa Monica Museum of Art and was awarded a California Community Fellowship. Adrian Meraz lives and works in NYC.
Anke Weyer’s ink washes of wolves and nocturnal birds are an invitation to reflect and also be consumed by beauty. While known for large, brooding abstractions, Weyer has been making these more intimate works for over a year now in a continuing series called “Night Roamers.” This series, represents a respite from daylights harsh and predictive rigor. The ink washes came into their own, feral and ephemeral creatures haunting desolate landscapes. Slowly, Weyer began to see the works as a whole. “Night is the place where perceptions are challenged, and changed ”says Weyer. They are images of a possible journey, a chance encounter, following a stranger into an unknown place. Anke Weyer is a graduate of the Hochschule fur bildende Kunste, Staedelschule, Frankfurt Germany and is represented by Canada Gallery, NY. She lives and works in NYC.