Sunday, April 29, 2012

PULSE NYC with Hilger Contemporary








I'm very excited that I'll be showing my pieces at the Pulse Art Fair in NYC with Hilger Contemporary. Please stop by if you are in the city.



HILGER MODERN/CONTEMPORARY @ PULSE NYC, MAY 3 - 6, 2012
Booth: D3
LOCATION:
PULSE New York
The Metropolitan Pavilion
125 West 18th Street Chelsea,
New York, NY 10011

FAIR HOURS :
Thursday May 3 9am-12pm
Press and VIP Private Preview
hosted by artnet Auctions
Thursday May 3 12pm- 8pm
Friday May 4 9am-10am
Private VIP Hour
Friday May 4 10am-8pm
Saturday May 5 12pm-8pm
Sunday May 6 12pm-5pm


KünstlerInnen/artists:

Gunter Damisch
Oliver Dorfer
Ai Kijima
Ángel Marcos
Andrew Mezvinsky
Brian McKee
Cameron Platter
Sara Rahbar
Mel Ramos
Massimo Vitali

Nähere Information/Further info:
michael.kaufmann@hilger.at
+43 (1) 512 53 15 18
+43 650 273 96 50
www.hilger.at 

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

WHITEHOT MAGAZINE review





some cool pictures from the opening reception.
whitehot | April 2012: Ai Kijima @ Franklin Parrasch Gallery

Whitehot Magazine of Contemporary Art: "April 2012: Ai Kijima @ Franklin Parrasch Gallery" by artist Michael Anderson in New York

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Ai Kijima / Press Release

AI KIJIMA at 548 west 22 street
April 5-28, 2012
reception: Thursday April 5, 6-8p

Hallucinatory Technicolor textile amalgamations of everything from bits of picnic blankets to kimonos, Ai Kijima’s quilts are so visually tightly packed as to make the concept of horror vacui superfluous. With compositional complexity, various values are recombined into a dizzying harmonious whole, using “old” technology (a sewing machine) to test and prod in a very new and contemporary manner the boundaries and borders of appropriation and (im)proprietary borrowing. Compulsively cutting, stitching, and transforming, she shrewdly expands on the inherent nature of quilting as a traditional craft already depending on the reuse of previously owned materials, conjuring up a recycled visionary fantasia that in its cacophonous overabundance paradoxically achieves a certain level of pictorial calm. The discarded and thrown away commercially-printed cloth is adapted by this self-professed “fabric and sewing addict” to a bizarre composite realm full of crowds of cavorting reconstituted characters. Folkloric archetypes and their offspring, corporate and entertainment characters and logos, are the found objects that range from unicorns and cats to a vintage revolver to Lucy’s psychiatric booth from “Peanuts,” a purple Teletubbie, Little Orphan Annie, Tony the Tiger, Winnie the Pooh, Bob Marley, Homer and Marge Simpsons, Sponge Bob Square Pants – and that’s just in one work – all promiscuously mingling in warm and fuzzy but also unsettling and twisted fabric-scapes of mindboggling intricacy.

“I consider myself an artist with craftsmanship. Although my materials are very domestic and my techniques come from quilting, I believe I can incarnate them into something else.” And she does, taking “craft” to another place, entering new dimensions, and building up possible narratives, all from the discarded remnants of people’s personal lives. In an act of transformative re-contextualization, the two large works on display appear to be paintings from afar but on closer inspection are quilts, though the distinction is immaterial in the face of such off-the-charts skill and execution. Sleight of hand is at play, trickery, in an exalted sense, with things, and parts of things lurking ambiguously in the background, and what could be seen as overwhelming is the fascinating sum of the parts that is greater than the whole. The wild conglomeration (to cite the second piece on view) of football players, basketball stars, feathers, Scooby Doo, Superman, pirates, Chief Joseph, Teenage Ninja Turtles, and Garfield combine to be that “something else” Kijima alludes and aspires to, and achieves. Personal interpretations and visions of the world are converted into expressive collages of mass production that double as abstract “paintings,” the detritus of pop culture is subdued and wrestled with, re-combined and blended, bringing forth an imaginative zone of excess handled with remarkable finesse.

Franklin Parrasch Gallery will be holding a reception for the artist on Thursday April 5, 2012 from 6-8p at 548 WEST 22 STREET.

This exhibition takes place at 548 West 22 Street; hours are 11a-5p Tuesday-Friday, 10a-6p Saturday. For images, biography, and further information, please contact the gallery at info@franklinparrasch.com or 212-246-5360, Tuesday-Saturday 10a-6p.


franklin parrasch gallery
20 w 57 st and 548 w 22 st
t 212-246-5360 f 212-246-5391
info@franklinparrasch.com
www.franklinparrasch.com

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Ai Kijima at Franklin Parrasch Gallery Chelsea

AI KIJIMA 

April 2 - 28, 2012
Franklin Parrasch Gallery
548 W 22 Street New York, NY 10011
Artist Reception April 5, 6-8pm