New York, NY - 22 May 2008 - 21 June 2008

James Davis - Another Time's Forgotten Space / Eugenio Percossi - Black and White

James Davis: Message Mountain, 2007
James Davis: Message Mountain, 2007

Outdoor reader board with letters, acrylic glue, 40" x 10" x 72"

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Drawing inspiration from his natural surroundings in eastern Mississippi, James Davis, in his exhibition entitled "Another Time's Forgotten Space", transforms industrial materials into visual abstractions of his environment. The seemingly chaotic and random variations found in nature are highlighted and contrasted by Davis' labor-intensive use of repetition. His systematic approach to working, simultaneously controlled and random, ultimately reinforces the continued existence of chaotic permutations in nature as opposed to the linear certainty of technological advancement. Through his microscopic, obsessive, and unnatural utilization of common materials (many of which can be found at an office supply store), subjective and objective worlds collide, creating a truly contemporary vision of nature.

James Davis: Pine, 2005-07
James Davis: Pine, 2005-07

One-half million staples on corkboard, 48" x 72"

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In "Pine" (2005-07), Davis has fashioned a woodland scene by hand-stapling into corkboard over a half million green and silver staples in successive layers. The resulting morphing and plasma-like forms echo the artist's dream-like state as he drove through country back roads and is a scene familiar to those living in and around West Point, Mississippi. The area is known for Mossy Oak, a camouflage company created by a local hunter, whose designs mimic the local flora. The camouflage clothing allows one to fit into the local landscape, environment, and culture. The recent boom of other larger companies though has resulted in the deforestation of the very trees that have inspired the local community for so long.

Consciously creating works in monochrome and duotone, unlike earlier pieces that explored color variations, Davis is able to expose form and medium more clearly. In doing so, he creates a more direct relationship between the formal aspects of his work and its conceptual and literary origins, much in the same way that the text of a book accumulates to make up its physical aspects as well as its content, with the title revealing the overall gist of the work.

James Davis: Shower, 2007
James Davis: Shower, 2007

Hole-punched velour, grommets, PVC, shower curtain hooks, fan, 9' x 13' x 18'

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By punching thousands of slightly varied holes in velour, then suspending the velour in front of a white piece of fabric and blowing a fan at them, Davis gives us "Shower" (2007), which at once mimics a constantly glistening field of stars and water droplets on a shower curtain. The piece is a meditation on both his fascination with the behavior of water and a reminiscence of a late-night fishing experience. Surrounded only by the calm, lapping water of a pond and the natural light of a sky full of stars, Davis was struck by the sublime beauty of the situation in which he found himself. The massive scale of Shower envelops viewers and provides them with a sense of sharing in the experience that Davis felt that night.

Eugenio Percossi: Black and White, 2008
Eugenio Percossi: Black and White, 2008

Mixed Media, Dimensions variable

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In RARE PLUS, Eugenio Percossi presents an installation entitled "Black and White" as an entry ticket to a world where reality fades into illusion and truth into imagination. The black and white room, with an atmosphere and scenery reminiscent of the 1930s, is so authentic that one has the impression it has always been there. Everything from the furniture, wall decoration, and bed to the accessories and flowers is executed in "grisaille", as if old, frozen, and forgotten. Percossi's room is empty, but full and furnished in every detail, with unreality and illusion blending with nostalgia and memories.

RARE

521 West 26th Street
10001 New York, NY
Phone: 
+1 212 268 1520
Fax: 
+1 212 268 0123
Exhibition
22 May 2008 - 21 June 2008
Online since 16 May 2008
Opening Hours: 
Tues-Sat 11 am - 6 pm, and Monday by appointment