Category: Uncategorized

Back To School

Back to School
September 21, 2023
5-8pm

EXHIBITION
Back to School reflects on the artistic childhood remnants of a group of US-based artists. Looking at the original impulse from which their practice started, the exhibition is a celebration of the passion, angst, curiosity, and freedom of their first artistic ideas, experiences, and works. Often seen as mere ‘play,’ or instrumentalized within a psychoanalytical framework, very early works or ideas generally remain unshown.
The works by the participating artists – who have now made a career from their unique way of looking at the world – might not yet show the elaborate artistic skills they now have at their disposal, but they do reveal clear traces of themes, forms, and perspectives that have proven essential later in their career. Revolving around childhood relics, the exhibition functions as a way to excavate the potentiality of early artistic sensibilities.
Through drawings, sketchbooks, home videos, photos, and site-specific works, the show considers these childhood fragments “monuments to the possibility of expression,” necessities for establishing their future artistic trajectories. What has remained and what can be regained from reflecting on this group’s earliest formative moments and creations? Considering what these remnants meant to their makers, Back to School sheds light on early ideas that took the participating artists to where they are now, and foregrounds childhood as an interwoven part of an artist identity. The elements of the show are inextricably shaped by the artists’ environments. What means of expression were available to the artists as children? What remnants were valued enough to have been captured, saved, and archived? How were their expressions filtered through race, class, and gender? Journeying back in time, away from the heavily market-driven art world of New York, this project offers a reconnection to where it all began and what is still driving them now.

PARTICIPATING ARTISTS

Ivana Bašić, Harry Gould Harvey IV, Anna K.E., Cole Lu, Florian Meisenberg, Monica Mirabile, Tin Nguyen, Rachel Rossin

Curated by Jeanette Bisschops

*Curatorial addendum: Growing up as the daughter of a child psychotherapist and a child psychiatrist, my parents both psychoanalyzed children’s drawings for a living, yet, they never believed art had any real social value in the world. I got my Master’s degree in Psychology after high school and decided to pursue a Master’s in Art History after working as a psychologist for about a year, so this is a very personal project for me. Rather than analyzing the artists’ psyche, I was drawn to early signs of their innate artistic language and creative impulses.

Opening September 21 5-8PM

On view until December 7

 

Seneca Weintraut – The Observable Field of Wood Grain Theory

 

Plank Road is pleased to present a solo exhibition of new encaustic paintings and sculptures by Seneca Weintraut.

The works on view are the product of Weintraut’s understanding of painting as a spontaneous game of make-believe. His work subverts the linearity of “the artist’s progress” or the finality of “the finished work,” instead presenting works that appear instantaneous, a product of the immediate moment. Weintraut’s canvases also embody his idea of human knowledge––and its visual expressions––as fragile and fallible, always ebbing and flowing depending on our ability to articulate, to honestly convey.

Seneca Weintraut is a Hoosier living and working in Philadelphia. Weintraut studied at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in the summer of 2013 before receiving his MFA in painting from the Tyler School of Art at Temple University in 2015. In years past, Weintraut counted money on a riverboat casino, cut grass in an oil refinery, and built mausoleums in several prominent cemeteries. In Philly, Weintraut is currently a member of the artist-run gallery Fjord and maintains a regular studio practice at The Loom where his paintings and simple wood carvings allow him to freely explore the delusional ontology of Wood Grain Theory, non-linear timelines, and the ultimate question “What is Diamondhead?”

 




Ryan Rennie – BACK DIRT

Ryan Rennie
BACK DIRT
February 28, 2020 – March 20, 2020

 

 

 

Rennie’s work confronts the commercial production of the “rustic copy,”; objects found in big-box stores which often show flattened scenes of ancient ceramic vessels, injection molded and stamped into plastic in high volume and sold for little- an inversion of the original slow process that created the vessels that these objects make reference to.

Rennie reintroduces these often dismissed objects back into the medium and vernacular of the ceramic tradition in hopes of showing that an object can still retain its value, even emotional resonance, through cycles of repeated reproduction and mutation of materials. 

His sculptures––re-makings of unremarkable but evocative objects he associates with a suburban adolescence––tell of age and time passed, despite being polished reflections and products of modern consumption.

In the context of an archaeological dig where the source material for these works might be found, Back Dirtrefers to “The excavated, discarded material from a site that has generally been sifted for artifacts and is presumed to be of no further archaeological significance.” 

 

Alexa West / Pavilion

Alexa West
Pavilion
September 19 – 21, 2019

featuring Sharleen Chidiac, Tenaya Kelleher, Jes Nelson, and Susannah Yugler

curated by Moira Sims

Plank Road is pleased to present Alexa West’s site-specific 30 minute choreography featuring Sharleen Chidiac, Tenaya Kelleher, Jes Nelson, and Susannah Yugler titled: Pavilion.

A century ago, the Ridgewood neighborhood that surrounds Plank Road was home to abundant dancing pavilions. These public, semi-indoor spaces were defined as free standing, open-air structures with roofs and no walls. Pavilions offered the community shelter from the elements and a meeting place for collective recreation, while enforcing behavioral norms in the public sphere. After completion of the Queensboro Bridge in 1909, Queens transformed from farmland and sparse settlements into densely settled, immigrant communities, mainly comprised of tightly packed row houses. These communities desired free-of-charge spaces to congregate outside of work and houses of worship, and dancing pavilions became ubiquitous. Rapid city expansion forced the collective consciousness to reconsider the value of public recreational space.

New York City continued to expand, and in 1961 the Department of City Planning instituted zoning laws to generate Publicly Owned Private Spaces (POPS) within newly constructed skyscrapers and luxury towers. With this new legislation, developments over a certain size were required to consider the public and offer a percentage of their plot as refuge for all. POPS requirements remain loose, and developers can decide to construct and maintain a lush green space — or opt to simply open a slab of concrete to the public in exchange for lenient tax waivers from the city. These in-between spaces offer urbanites a modern taste of pavilions past – in good weather, lone office workers have a place away from their desks to eat lunch.

In her own practice, West observes and collects movements from everyday life: a family sitting on a park bench and motioning to one another in conversation; someone searching for a dropped coin under a chair; a straphanger slumping into the subway pole after a long day. The gestures West draws from in this choreography range from total banality to oddly coincidental. Collaborating with four trained dancers, West has envisioned a long form amalgamation of both real and imagined public behaviors, touching on the way we interact with others and with city structures. Site-specific street furniture provides audience seating, allowing the audience to participate in both observing and being observed in a semi-public setting. Pavilion encourages the audience to replicate West’s own artistic practice by sitting on a park bench and becoming aware of their surroundings.

Alexa West CV

Ruthie Natanzon and Lulu White

Ruthie Natanzon and Lulu White
Respite Plaza
November 30, 2018 – January 18, 2019

curated by Moira Sims

Installation view, Respite Plaza, Ruthie Natanzon and Lulu White, 2018. Image courtesy of the artists and Plank Road.

 

Ruthie Natanzon. Road Work Ahead, 2018. Oil on canvas. 72 x 58 inches.

 

Ruthie Natanzon. Road Work Ahead, 2018. Oil on canvas. 72 x 58 inches.

 

Installation view, Respite Plaza, Ruthie Natanzon and Lulu White, 2018. Image courtesy of the artists and Plank Road.

 

Lulu White. Roof (fire), 2018. Hand-sewn embroidery on cotton, steel, concrete, epoxy clay, acrylic paint, pennies. Dimensions variable.

 

Installation view, Respite Plaza, Ruthie Natanzon and Lulu White, 2018. Image courtesy of the artists and Plank Road.

 

Ruthie Natanzon. Angry Iris in Snake’s Paradise, 2018. Oil on canvas, pigmented paper pulp on poplar. 48 x 40 inches.

 

Ruthie Natanzon. The World Winks at Dishonesty, 2018. Oil on canvas, pigmented paper pulp on poplar. 48 x 40 inches.

 

Installation view, Respite Plaza, Ruthie Natanzon and Lulu White, 2018. Image courtesy of the artists and Plank Road.

 

Installation view, Respite Plaza, Ruthie Natanzon and Lulu White, 2018. Image courtesy of the artists and Plank Road.

 

THIS SITE COMMEMORATES A HISTORICAL EVENT PRESERVED IN LOCAL PUBLIC RECORD:
A MAN STOOD IN A CLEARING FACING WEST TOWARD A ROAD AS THE SUN BEGAN TO LOWER. HE TURNED AWAY FROM THE ROAD AND FACED THE SAGEBRUSH THAT LINED ITS EDGE. LAID OVER THE LEAVES, THE MAN NOTICED HIS SHADOW OUTLINED BY THE ORANGE LIGHT OF THE SUN, AND A CAR PASSED BEHIND HIM LIKE WIND. SHORTLY AFTER THIS OCCURRENCE A PUBLIC PHENOMENON EMERGED. SOME RESIDENTS DESCRIBED A FRANTIC CURIOSITY FOR THE EXPANSE BEYOND THE BRUSH THAT FRAMED THE CITY. OTHERS WERE PARALYZED BY A SUDDEN AWARENESS OF THEIR INABILITY TO COMPREHEND WHAT HAD ONCE LAID BENEATH THE FOUNDATIONS OF THEIR HOMES.
PLANS FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF THIS SITE AND ITS CORRESPONDING MONUMENT WERE DRAFTED BY THE COMMISSIONER’S BUREAU SHORTLY AFTER THIS OCCURRENCE. IT WAS DECIDED THAT THE CLEARING BESIDE THE ROAD WHERE THE MAN ONCE STOOD WOULD BE DEMARCATED WITH STONES – THE MONUMENT RESIDING WITHIN IT– IN THE SHAPE OF THE CITY’S LIMITS AT 1:112 SCALE. THE MONUMENT WAS DESIGNED TO ALWAYS STAND AT A DISTANCE JUST BEYOND THE TRAJECTORY OF EVEN THE TALLEST VISITOR’S SHADOW. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO GAIN PROXIMITY TO THE MONUMENT THAT WOULD ALLOW A SHADOW TO BE CAST ON ITS SURFACE.
NEAR THE EDGE OF CITY LIMITS, THE MONUMENT REMAINS THE FURTHEST STANDING STRUCTURE FROM THE CITY’S CENTER. DESPITE THIS, IT HAS BEEN SAID TO MAKE RESIDENTS FEEL “CLOSEST TO HOME”.

 

FOR MAPS AND MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CONTACT THE COMMISSIONER’S BUREAU AT (202) 208-3801.

Ruthie Natanzon CV

Lulu White CV