Berlin 00:00:00 London 00:00:00 New York 00:00:00 Chicago 00:00:00 Los Angeles 00:00:00 Shanghai 00:00:00
members login here
Region
Country / State
City
Genre
Artist
Exhibition

Hauser & Wirth New York: Monika Sosnowska - 5 Nov 2010 to 18 Dec 2010

Current Exhibition


5 Nov 2010 to 18 Dec 2010

Hauser & Wirth New York
32 East 69th Street
New York, NY
New York
North America
p: +1 212 794 49 70
m:
f: +1 212 794 49 71
w: www.hauserwirth.com











Monika Sosnowska, Fence, 2010
Steel, paint, concrete
226.1 x 180.3 x 365.8 cm / 89 x 71 x 144 in
Web Links


Hauser & Wirth

Artist Links





Artists in this exhibition: Monika Sosnowska


Monika Sosnowska

5 November � 18 December 2010, Hauser & Wirth New York

Opening: Friday, November 5, 6 � 8 PM

New York, NY� Tweaking and torqing the formal minimalist idiom, 38-year old Polish artist Monika Sosnowska conjoins architecture and sculpture to explore the poetics and politics of space. She builds forms in response to specific sites, then manipulates them � collapsing, twisting and squeezing her work into alternate settings, creating labyrinths and optical illusions, birthing parasitic structures in ways that alter not only our perceptions of the physical areas around us but of psychological states within. Highlighting the banality of the material world we inhabit, Sosnowksa recalls the cultural conceits that produced buildings and their details, often those of the failed utopia of People�s Poland. Within the intense emotional force field of her work many of the things we assume, are simply no longer certain.

On November 5th, Hauser & Wirth New York will present the gallery�s first solo exhibition by the artist. Monika Sosnowska will feature seven major new, unique sculptures created specifically for this exhibition. These will remain on view through December 18th.

The works presented at Hauser & Wirth are based upon Sosnowska�s recent residency at Artpace San Antonio, and are inspired by the ubiquitous emergency stairwells that scale the sides of old buildings throughout that city and others where the artist has spent time. The image of a zigzagging fire escape has become intuitive within Western architectural iconography. In response, Sosnowska has fabricated her own stairwell, stripping it of its functionality by dismantling the main elements � a horizontal metal platform, a balustrade, stairs, a ladder extension, and so forth � and giving each component its own autonomous sculptural identity. Together the pieces would comprise a small, working fire escape; taken apart, however, the segments are misshapen and warped beyond use, presented as a series of individual vignettes in space.

Sosnowska�s formal language echoes different contradictory modernisms: that of the Polish constructivism of the 1930s, the minimal and conceptual tendencies of the international art of the 1960s and 1970s, and the Socialist architecture found in Eastern European states. History is thus encountered as both local and international, a force that moves at different speeds resulting in the buckling of cultures under its pressure. Space is encountered as a psychosomatic quality, as political as its experience is personal, forever veering in the mind of the viewer between the uncanny and the Sublime.



SIGN UP FOR NEWSLETTERS
Follow on Twitter

Click on the map to search the directory

USA and Canada Central America South America Western Europe Eastern Europe Asia Australasia Middle East Africa
SIGN UP for ARTIST MEMBERSHIP SIGN UP for GALLERY MEMBERSHIP