Exhibition One

Tuesday, October 5th, 2010

Kari Altmann

Charles Broskoski

Lindsay Lawson

Billy Rennekamp

Maxwell Simmer

Harm Van Den Dorpel

Curated and rendered by

Timur Si-Qin

 

Hosted by

Gentili Apri

Chrystal Gallery Exhibition One October 6 - October 7 Opening Reception October 5th, h 20

Chrystal Galleryis teaming up with Gentili Apri to present Exhibition One. A computer rendered group show with works by Kari Altmann, Charles Broskoski, Lindsay Lawson, Billy Rennekamp, Maxwell Simmer, and Harm Van Den Dorpel - curated and rendered by Timur Si-Qin.

Extracting a parallel instance of the work as a three-dimensional representation of geometric data, Exhibition One offers an opportunity to present an alternate framework that posits the questions: Where does an artwork stop and its documentation begin? What is the function of a prospective image that is decisively not-a-model?

"So what we are left with is a distinction not primarily between the model and the copy, or the real and the imaginary, but between two modes of simulation. One is normative, regularizing, and reproductive. It selects only certain properties of the entities it takes up: hard work, loyalty, good parenting, etc. It creates a network of surface resemblances. They are surface resemblances because at bottom they not resemblances at all but standardized actions: what those entities do when called upon. What bodies do depends on where they land in a abstract grid of miraculated identities that are in practice only a bundle of normalized and basically reproductive functions. It is not a question of Platonic copies, but of human replicants. Every society creates a quasi-causal system of this kind. In capitalist society the ultimate quasi-cause is capital itself, which is described by Marx as a miraculating substance that arrogates all things to itself and presents itself as first and final cause. This mode of simulation goes by the name of "reality."

"The other mode of simulation is the one that turns against the entire system of resemblance and replication. It is also distributive, but the distribution it effects is not limitative. Rather than selecting only certain properties, it selects them all, it multiplies potentials: not to be human, but to be human plus. This kind of simulation is called "art." Art also recreates a territory, but a territory that is not really territorial. It is less like the earth with its gravitational grid than an interplanetary space, a deterritorialized territory providing a possibility of movement in all directions. Artists are replicants who have found the secret of their obsolescence." Brian Massumi, REALER THAN REAL, 1987

Chrystal Gallery Exhibition One opens at Gentili Apri and online. 8pm on Tuesday October 5th, 2010.

http://chrystalgallery.info/

http://gentiliapri.com/exhibitions/the-chrystal-gallery/

 

 

 

 

 

 

Billy Rennekamp - FTW, 2010

 

 

 

 

 

Charles Broskoski - ABACAB, 2010

 

 

Harm Van Den Dorpel - Studie, 2010, Detolf, 2010

 

Harm Van Den Dorpel - Sol, 2009, Charles Broskoski - ABACAB, 2010

 

Harm Van Den Dorpel - Sol, 2009, Charles Broskoski - ABACAB, 2010

 

Harm Van Den Dorpel - Studie, 2010

 

Harm Van Den Dorpel - Detolf, 2010

 

 

 

Lindsay Lawson - Impossible Non-Object of Desire, 2010, Harm Van Den Dorpel - Studie, 2010.

Lindsay Lawson - Impossible Non-Object of Desire, 2010

 

 

Maxwell Simmer - Seamaster, 2010

 

Left to right: Maxwell Simmer - Seamaster, 2010, Harm Van den Dorpel - Detolf, 2010,

 

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Kari Altmann - How to Hide Your Plasma (Handheld Icon Shapeshift for Liquid Chrystal Display), 2010