We
Come Undone
February
20, 2013 - March 30, 2013
Reception:
February 19, 2013, 6 to 8 pm.
Yashua Klos in conversation with curator Kalia Brooks
Friday, March 29, 2013, 6:30pm
Yashua Klos in conversation with curator Kalia Brooks
Friday, March 29, 2013, 6:30pm
8
East 76th Street
New
York, NY
Tilton Gallery is
pleased to present We Come Undone,
a solo exhibition of wall collages and drawings by Yashua Klos. This is Klos'
first one person show at Tilton. A reception for the artist will take
place on Tuesday, February 19th from 6 to 8 pm.
Yashua
Klos explores issues of identity, memory and biography through the lenses of
mythical blackness and mythical maleness. Working against the audience's
pre-existing views, Klos consciously engages in a strategy of cultural
resistance, using scale and form as well as subject matter to push back against
cultural ideas of blackness and marginalization.
Klos'
formal construction of disparate collaged images mirrors the constant
fracturing and reconciliation of blackness, masculinity and family structures
within the black urban environment. Klos sees collage itself, as a medium, as a
metaphor for the fragmentation of African American identity. Informed by his
personal history of growing up without a father on the South Side of Chicago,
the artist also references the larger ideas of ancestry, mythology and
cosmology. His constructions lead one into an imaginary landscape, at once
ancient and futuristic, classic and sci-fi, where identity is both in question
and shockingly evident.
Klos
creates his own shallow cubist space by juxtaposing and overlapping smaller
collage elements, twisting and turning their orientation to create the illusion
of spatial movement and three-dimensional wall sculpture. The impression of
fractured space is furthered by the angled vantage points and foreshortened
views of recognizable images.
These
are collages hung directly, unframed, on the wall that appear to be intricate
patterns composed of multiple, repetitive elements that appear from afar as
abstract units. What distinguishes Klos' work is that these small elements are
as often representational or figurative as abstract. They converge to create
the larger, whole, images, also representational, often portraits and figures
emerging out of an unidentifiable pile of rubble. Heads and faces emerge out of
abstract shapes that double as both building blocks and debris. Assembled out
of woodblock prints and ink, larger intricate worlds come into being: ambiguous
half abstract, half recognizable images, challenging spatial norms as well as
art history's stylistic categories. This physical complexity echoes the
psychological ambiguities that comprise Klos' subject. Perhaps a sculptor at
heart, Klos transforms his two-dimensional collages into three-dimensional
illusions, works that are at once flat on the wall and appear built out, more
like sculptural reliefs.
Born
in Chicago, Klos currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York and teaches at
Hunter College where he received his MFA and at Parsons The New School for
Design. He was a resident of the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in
2005. His work is currently included in Fore on view November 11, 2012 through March 10, 2013 at The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York.
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