Mary Boone Gallery at 541 West 24 St: LUIS GISPERT - El Mundo Es Tuyo (The World is Yours), - 12 Jan 2008 to 1 Mar 2008

Current Exhibition


12 Jan 2008 to 1 Mar 2008
Tues to Fri 10 - 6. Saturday 10 - 5
Mary Boone Gallery
541 West 24 St
New York, NY
New York
North America
p: 1 2127522929
m:
f: 1 2127523939
w: www.maryboonegallery.com











Luis Gispert
Photograph from "Smother" (BMX)
40 x 60 in. C-Print, 2007
12
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Artists in this exhibition: LUIS GISPERT


On 12 January 2008 the Mary Boone Gallery, in collaboration with Zach Feuer Gallery, will open at its Chelsea location El Mundo Es Tuyo (The World is Yours), an exhibition of new work by LUIS GISPERT featuring a 26-minute film, a series of large-format photographs, and five sculptures.

Smother, the 26-minute film, is premiering at Mary Boone Gallery. Bathed in the atmosphere of 1980�s Miami, the film explores violent and sometimes twisted childhood nightmares through the retrograde lens of Freudian analysis. Drifting between real and hyper-real, the film follows an 11-year-old boy as he undergoes a series of painful physical transformations that ultimately lead him to break the adolescent bonds that bind him to his overbearing mother. Gispert wrote the script with artist Orly Genger and collaborated on the soundtrack with the Miami based interdisciplinary bass experimentalists Phoenecia (Joshua Kay & Romulo del Castillo).

Large format photographs from Smother are shown at Mary Boone Gallery, while the mise-en-sc�ne of the film is captured at Zach Feuer Gallery in photographs that combine images of incredibly ornate truck interiors with surreal Latin-American socio-economic tableaus. These works explore the aesthetics of wealth as they relate to the poverty and oppression evidenced in much of the Western world. This tension between auspicious wealth and cultural naivet� is also apparent in the installation of sculpture at Zach Feuer Gallery. Here, Gispert employs neon lights, mirrors, pastel colors and high-gloss lacquer finishes to reference
the interiors of the opulent, narco-nouveau riche mansions remembered from his Miami childhood.