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Born
in Providence, Rhode Island in 1965, Ellen Gallagher first won international
attention at the Whitney Biennial in 1995. Gallagher's second exhibition
at the Anthony d'Offay gallery surpasses all the promise of her
first show here in 1996. In these grand new works, this young American
artist continues to develop her private vocabulary of pictographs
and characteristic use of a penmanship paper grid with increased
confidence and deeper use of colour.
This new series of paintings, plus drawings and a sequence of prints,
demonstrate her on-going concern with fake language and its private
interiorness. Marks function as characters, though meanings are
not confined within them and may be multiple. She uses repetition
and revision as in musical notation, when with each return a phrase
is slightly revised. This idea is central to Gallagher's cosmology:
The characters are refigured, and through a refiguring of their
language they experience their position anew. These accumulations
can become a single character (as in the larger black paintings)
or form spells ... through their
consumption and digestion a performance is created.
Gallagher's extraordinary black paintings are a recent evolution
in her work. In these paintings she seals her pictographs within
an impenetrable, reflective surface of blackness, their outlines
only decipherable in relief. The raised ridges of the surface are
built up from layers of gesso or small pieces of rubber under skins
of enamel paint. On one canvas thousands of tiny rubber forms make
up an African headrest which floats inside an inverted hemisphere.
Above it the rubber markings swirl and drift into another painting,
converging to form a cactus and a tree, while the inverted hemisphere
is transformed into several vaudeville bow-ties.
In the same room as this work, a drawing on a page torn from an
old Ebony magazine features a loose grid of wigged ladies. By binding
the models' faces with small black, plasticine hemispheres in the
form of masks and blindfolds, Gallagher has conscripted these women
to enter her private iconography.
Gallagher
manipulates spatial relationships. She constructs intricate layers
of materials and then punctures the skin. The work from a distance
presents a compositional whole, yet requires our close scrutiny
to read the miniature code structure. Drawn in, nose to canvas,
we can no longer see the pattern of the whole, only the working
details of obsession.
Ellen Gallagher lives and works in New York. Her work is currently
included in the exhibition, 'Greater New York', in New York at PS1.
Her last exhibition in this country was her solo show at the Ikon
Gallery in 1998.
A publication is in production which will illustrate works in the
show and others, with a text by Thyrza Nichols Goodeve. Further
details available during the show.
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