Goff+Rosenthal: Ashes For Breakfast - 2 July 2008 to 8 Aug 2008

Current Exhibition


2 July 2008 to 8 Aug 2008
Exhibition Times: Tue-Sat 11AM-6PM
Goff + Rosenthal
537B West 23rd Street
New York, NY
10011
New York
North America
p: 212 675-0461
m:
f: 212 675-0534
w: www.goffandrosenthal.com











Type A, Untitled (crush) from the Insertions series, 2007
chromogenic print
30.5 x 39.5 inches (77 x 100 cm), edition of 3
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Goff + Rosenthal

Artist Links


Joe Biel
Kevin Francis Gray
Faris McReynolds
Scott Hunt
Susanne Kühn
Cornelia Renz
Stephen Bush
Kristian Kozul
Rangi Kipa
Abetz/Drescher



Artists in this exhibition: Ahmed Alsoudani, Joe Biel, Type A


Ashes For Breakfast
July 2nd – August 8th, 2008

Ahmed Alsoudani
Joe Biel
Type A

Goff + Rosenthal is pleased to present “Ashes for Breakfast”, a group exhibition with works by gallery artists Ahmed Alsoudani, Joe Biel and Type A.
“Ashes for Breakfast” refers to the title of a poem by the contemporary German poet Durs Grunbein which Joe Biel cites as a source for his sprawling, intricate and often apocalyptic graphite works on paper. The poem is a multi-part catalogue of contemporary urban life -- humorous and bleak, existentially unmoored, and fed an endless stream of information about the atrocities of the day. It is a life with the peculiar feature in which one is as removed from the world as one is morally engaged with it:

I have breakfasted on ashes, the black
Dust that comes off newspapers, from the freshly printed columns.
When a coup makes no stain, and a tornado sticks to half a page.
And it seemed to me as though the Fates licked their lips.

Ahmed Alsoudani’s violent paintings of war and atrocity, Joe Biel’s ruined terroir of humanist ideals and symbols called “Compound” and Type A’s humorous and minimal “insertions”—body parts inserted into the relatively new structure of an always-evolving urban “security” apparatus in New York--are part of the legacy of our post-911 world. We are at war but it’s the gruesomeness of Alsoudani’s paintings that reminds us we barely see images of the horror of war. In the same way we hardly notice the new gray, black and orange corrals springing up across the city. The works in this exhibition allow one to notice what is so pervasive but deliberately not shown or made obvious.

Ahmed Alsoudani was born in Baghdad in 1975. He is a recent (2008) graduate of the MFA in Painting at Yale University. His work has been exhibited at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Portland, Maine; The Gwangju Museum of Art, Gwangju, South Korea; and at Filament Gallery, Portland, Maine. He will have a solo exhibition of new paintings at Goff + Rosenthal Berlin in the Spring, 2009. A monograph on his work will be published by Hatje Cantz next year.
Joe Biel’s work was included in the Aldrich Museum’s “Erotic Drawing: Part One.” Last year he was included in LA Louver’s annual “Rogue Wave” exhibition and has also had solo exhibitions with Greg Kucera Gallery in Seattle and Kuckei + Kuckei in Berlin. His work has been featured in publications such as Contemporary magazine and ArtReview.

Type A is the collaboration of New York artists Adam Ames (b. 1969) and Andrew Bordwin (b. 1964). Type A has upcoming sculpture and installation projects with the Aldrich Museum, the Tang Museum at Skidmore College and the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University in 2009-2010 and a separate upcoming project at the Indianapolis Museum of Art in 2010. Hatje Cantz is publishing a monograph in 2009. Type A’s work has been featured in many publications including The New York Times, Time Out New York, Art in America, Art Forum, The New Yorker and Art on Paper. They will show with Goff + Rosenthal New York in the Spring, 2009.