WESTERN EXHIBITIONS: BEN STONE | JOEY FAUERSO - 10 Sept 2010 to 9 Oct 2010

Current Exhibition


10 Sept 2010 to 9 Oct 2010
Hours : Wednesday thru Saturdays, noon to 6pm
WESTERN EXHIBITIONS
119 N Peoria, Suite 2A
IL 60607
Chicago, IL
Illinois
North America
p: 312.480.8390
m:
f:
w: www.westernexhibitions.com











BEN STONE
Installation view, Western Exhibitions, 2010
Web Links


WestTown Gallery Network

Artist Links





Artists in this exhibition: BEN STONE, JOEY FAUERSO




In Gallery 1
BEN STONE

September 10 to October 9, 2010
Opening reception, Friday, September 10, 5 to 8pm



Western Exhibitions kicks off the fall season with new work by Ben Stone. Stone� six new sculptures and one small painting transform two-dimensional images culled from popular sources into compelling and uncanny three-dimensional forms. The show will open will open on Friday, September 10 with a free public reception from 5 to 8pm.

The shocking beating of Kansas City Royals first base coach Tom Gamboa at a Chicago White Sox game in 2002 forms the centerpiece of this show. In the incident, White Sox fans William Ligue and his son, highly intoxicated, ran onto the field unprovoked and attacked Gamboa, knocking him to the ground, landing several punches, then took a beating from outraged Kansas City players. The Ligues were ultimately arrested. Years later, this random act of violence still haunts Stone. His large sculpture, three life-size monochromatic figures rendered in resin-coated polystyrene, captures this abhorrent scene as Gamboa is first knocked to the ground, his cap flying, with the Ligues throwing errant haymakers. Stone sees the pure rage and beautiful futility of this act as a disruption in the system, a ghost in the machine, as if the Ligues were possessed by a strange energy from an angrier time steeped in Chicago�s darker cultural histories of the thinly veiled policy of segregation of the first Daley administration, the stockyards and Steve Dahl�s infamous disco demolition.

Other pieces in the show depict criminals or symbols of criminal behavior. Stone wrestles the superflat characters Team Rocket, the villainous threesome from the animated television series Pok�mon into a low relief sculpture. His fascination with the Pok�mon evildoers comes from the anime show with his daughter and admiring the team�s persistence to �denounce the evils of truth and love� despite the constant failure of their nefarious plans. Stone finds their absolute certainty and dedication to doomed outcomes analogous to his own artistic production. Despite his perceived failures, Stone finds himself heading to the studio every day with fresh abandon.

Other works in the show include two sculptures which render a representation of the criminal neighborhood watch signs, an anachronistic image of a shadowy figure wearing a fedora and overcoat with the lapels turned up, into minimalist totems; a five-foot tall elephant, sitting on its haunches, made out of thick coils of twisted rope, based on a small, almost guilty-seeming tchotcke elephant; a mini bust of a crying Abraham Lincoln wearing a hand-made Chicago Bears pom-pom topped knit cap; and a small painting on rope of William Ligue (one of the Gamboa attackers) and his chest-covering tattoo.

This is Ben Stone�s second solo show at Western Exhibitions. His last, in 2007, was reviewed in Artforum. His work has been shown at the Mattress Factory in Pittsburgh, DiverseWorks in Houston and in Chicago at Suitable, Ten-in-One, Gallery 400 and the Hyde Park Art Center. Stone�s seven-foot tall, 250 pound robot, Nuptron 4000, performed his wedding ceremony in 2004 and is currently moonlighting as the stand-up comedian Bernie Circuits, recently seen at Club Nutz at both the Museum of Contemporary Art and the NEXT Art Fair in Chicago. Stone received his BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design and his MFA from the University of Illinois-Chicago. He lives in Berwyn and maintains a studio in Chicago.



In Gallery 2
JOEY FAUERSO

September 10 to October 9, 2010
Opening reception, Friday, September 10, 5 to 8pm


Western Exhibitions kicks off the fall season with �Act Natural�, a solo exhibition by JOEY FAUERSO in Gallery 2. Fauerso will show two videos and figurative watercolors on paper that combine landscapes and figures, exploring a grey area between fantasy and reality. �Act Natural� will open on Friday, September 10 with a free reception that is open to the public from 5 to 8pm.

Over the past few years Fauerso has been working on a series of hand-painted animations that represent different kinds of physical and metaphorical transcendence. She draws from the histories of painting, dance and performance art while utilizing digital animation tools to explore the nature of human consciousness. The two videos in this show introduce live action to her work.

�Me Time� is an eight-minute video showing Fauerso making out with a series of puppets, including a fire fighter, a policeman and a construction worker. She attempts to make as �real� a connection as possible with the ridiculous-looking puppets.

�Clearing�, a three-minute video, superimposes live figures over antique wallpaper depicting a forested grove. Fauerso plays a flute in this forest and her music seduces a young naked man who twirls around until he collapses, while flocks of animated birds fly overhead. Fauerso is interested in challenging the history of images that equate the female body with nature: women as vulnerable, sexual creatures. Fauerso flips this script; in her paintings and videos, the male doesn�t control or dominate the landscape but is depicted as both vulnerable and erotic.

Her watercolor paintings of lone figures being erased or subsumed by a void marry the process of painting with the painted figure, continuing her theme of joining the real and the illusory.

This is Joey Fauerso�s second show with Western Exhibitions. Her paintings, works on paper and animations have been shown at the San Antonio Museum of Art, David Shelton Gallery, Finesilver Gallery and Sala Diaz, all in San Antonio, the Roswell Museum of Art in New Mexico and the Arlington Museum of Art in Texas. Her artist residencies include the Serie Project Residency in Austin, TX, Hotel Pupik in Austria, Korpulfsstadir Residency in Reykjavik, Iceland and the Roswell Artist in Residence in New Mexico. She received her MFA in 2001 from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Fauerso lives and works in San Antonio, Texas.