Posthumous Lives : Mitchell Anderson, Jon Rafman
Let's begin with an inherited belief — a vague picture of
what exists beyond this life and extends uncertainly so
into the next. Rendered material and concrete, this
spirit is bound up in mundane stuff and built into vacant
containers: dead stock trading cards, stacked up produce
crates, idle confessionals. These things in themselves
move us, provide a platform for an idea, demarcate a
portal to a vision - a second life, a better life, a
fully lived life. A certain kind of feeling exceeds these
containers to transmit the promise of pleasure, all
guaranteed by the touch of this talisman or the clutch of
that prosthesis. Typically these objects are
unremarkable, special for their generic qualities. For
instance, cheap cloth adorns the table, or a medieval
gif, lifted from some archive, decorates the chamber.
Here they’re turned. Mostly by themselves. These mantles
lend to the projection of reveries, passions. The works
in this exhibition express this spirituality, anchoring
us to the decidedly unspectacular. It becomes the other.
Our expectations push, rub up against these prosaic
things to reveal the magic of purported gravitas. These
artworks ground an other world in this one; they confess
the basic human search as formed in the present.
Piper Marshall
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Mitchell AndersonHigh Zest, 2015-2016Trading cards (sealed retail boxes), marble22 x 13.5 x 13.5 cm
8 5/8 x 5 1/4 x 5 1/4 in -
Mitchell AndersonUn Symposium sur ‘Alien’: a semiotic square, 2014-2016Laser etched titanium steel138 x 138 cm
54 3/8 x 54 3/8 in -
Mitchell AndersonUn Symposium sur ‘Alien’: a sliding signifier, 2014-2016Laser etched titanium steel138 x 138 cm
54 3/8 x 54 3/8 in -
Mitchell AndersonTarot Card Table Piece, 2016Street vending display, Piazza Colonna, Rome67 x 49 x 29 cm
26 3/8 x 19 1/4 x 11 3/8 in -
Mitchell AndersonUn Symposium sur ‘Alien’: a biological analogue, 2014-2016Laser etched titanium steel138 x 138 cm
54 3/8 x 54 3/8 in -
Jon RafmanDream Journal (Wound Man Closet), 2016CNC engraved wood, acrylic paint, video, TV screen, two speakers, electrical cables180 x 66 x 103 cm
70 7/8 x 26 x 40 1/2 in -
Jon RafmanDragons Fucking Car I (Relief), 2016White Carrara Marble152 x 126 x 20 cm
59 7/8 x 49 5/8 x 7 7/8 in -
Jon RafmanDragons Fucking Car II (Relief), 2016White Carrara Marble152 x 126 x 20 cm
59 7/8 x 49 5/8 x 7 7/8 in