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Apparently Invisible: Selections Spring
2009, The Drawing Center, New York
Main Gallery
February 20 – March 28, 2009
The works presented in Apparently Invisible skirt the edge of perception,
subtly recalibrating our experience of seeing. In some cases, the
artworks are physically hard to see, and therefore
require a very careful kind of inspection, a literal double take.
In other works, the materials themselves have been so intricately
worked and unconventionally applied that the objects they form become
exceedingly difficult to distinguish. Although the artists featured
in the exhibition deploy a diverse array of aesthetic strategies,
all of them refer to traces of the drawn line as the basis for formal
and conceptual explorations of optical experience.
Participating artists include: Susan Collis, Michaela Fruhwirth,
Elana Herzog, Marietta Hoferer, Sarah
Kabot, Anne Lindberg, Janine Magelssen, Chris Nau, and Janet Passehl.
This exhibition is curated by Nina Katchadourian, Viewing Program
Curator, The Drawing Center; Joanna Kleinberg, Assistant Curator,The
Drawing Center; and Rachel Liebowitz, Curatorial Assistant, The Drawing
Center.
Janine Magelssen (Oslo, Norway) uses the wall and floor as the backdrop
for her installations of multiple, small white objects made from wood,
putty, and chalk. These minimalist
reliefs create barely visible lines and surfaces that bridge the disciplines
of drawing and sculpture.
She builds up spare, rectilinear marks into reliefs and small sculptural
forms that relate to one another and yet question their own legibility.
www.drawingcenter.org


TILSYNELATENDE USYNLIG
Janine Magelssen stiller ut i New York
Tekst av Ingun Bøhn i Tegnerforbundets tidskrift NUMMER 80,
2009
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