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Art News:

Mary Ryan Gallery - For Immediate Release

Josh Dorman  

Lost Divers 

September 8 through October 22, 2011

Reception: September 8, 6 - 8 pm

Josh Dorman - Lost Divers   

Mary Ryan Gallery is pleased to announce Lost Divers, Josh Dorman's third solo exhibition at the Gallery.  This exhibition includes new paintings on wood panel that combine Dorman's unique mix of ink, acrylic and collage over antique paper. Dorman's use of weathered bits of collage material-all pre-photography, generally engravings from antiquarian books and manuals-allows his work to exist somewhere between the past and present, and often in both at once.  This sense of dislocation in time is essential to Dorman whose influences range from Bosch and Sassetta to Andrew Bird and Italo Calvino.  

 

Dorman has always been interested in dualities, contradictions, and simultaneous realities.  In his work, "Time shifts constantly, moves backwards, ceases. Space and scale are also unfixed: cities can be microscopic, paper-thin. They can mirror themselves underground; they can be inhabited by the dead," says Dorman. "My primary goal is to create worlds that are utterly specific and completely open."

True to form, Dorman's newest paintings offer infinite suggestions to their meanings and no explanation.  The title "Lost Divers" hints at both purposeful exploration and accidental disappearance.  Divers, many of which can be found hidden or plainly exposed in the works in this exhibition, are suspended between worlds, moving through atmospheres, and fraught with potential.  The engravings of divers come from an antiquarian book on swimming and diving techniques and a Russian scuba manual from the 1940s.

In recent paintings, Dorman has begun to collage in his own finely detailed graphite drawings, adding yet another facet to his kaleidoscopic images.  Dorman works on the small drawings in an automatic fashion, moving from left to right across the paper without any initial sketch.  In The Big Picture Show, the graphite drawing takes center stage. Illuminated by searchlights, it functions as both a billboard and movie screen, in what seems to be an otherworldly theater-laboratory hybrid.  Whether man, beast, or machine is running the show is not clear.

An illustrated catalogue with an essay by Nam Le and an interview with Mario Naves and Josh Dorman accompanies this exhibition (40 pages; $25).

Please contact Jordan Karney for more information at 212.397.0669 or jordan@maryryangallery.com   
 

Josh Dorman lives and works in New York City.  He received his MFA from Queens College in New York and has been the subject of many solo gallery exhibitions across the country.  Most recently Dorman was included in the four-person "Alumni Invitational" exhibition at the Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum at Skidmore College, and "Within Four Miles: The World of Josh Dorman" a solo exhibition at the Craft and Folk Art Museum in Los Angeles.  He has received grants and residencies from Yaddo, Saltonstall and the New York Foundation for the Arts, and has been written about in the Los Angeles Times, New York Times, ArtForum, The New Yorker, and by acclaimed author Paul Auster.

  

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