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CORRECTION -Artist Lineup- Mirus Gallery Presents "Off the Wall: Contemporary Sculpture"
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Mirus Gallery presents

Off the Wall: Contemporary Sculpture



Aaron Moran, Sump II, 2013, reclaimed wood, acrylic, house paint, textured spray paint, 16" x 13" x 19".


Opening Reception: Saturday April 20, 2013 | 6pm -10pm

Exhibition Dates: April 20 - June 1, 2013


Mirus Gallery | 540 Howard Street | San Francisco, CA


SAN FRANCISCO, April 9, 2013 – Mirus Gallery is pleased to announce, Off the Wall: Contemporary Sculpture, a group exhibition, featuring Clemens BehrJoseph CohenMatthew CraigBartek ElsnerMatt HoseyDuncan JohnsonLaura JudkisJonathan LeachAaron S. MoranDavid OliveiraAndrea Petrachi, Lauren RiceVadis TurnerRon Ulicny, and Andy Vible.

 

Off the Wall: Contemporary Sculpture is Mirus Gallery’s fifth exhibition. The participating artists are the creators of the three-dimensional works that inspired Paul Hemming to open the gallery, an addendum to 2012’s Escape Velocity exhibits. Off the Wall takes contemporary art into the third dimension, illustrating sculpture’s new frontier in form and unconventional materials. Though these artists are diverse in nationality, subject, and medium, their mosaics of common materials are a reflexive point of entry to the viewer’s world.

 

Aaron S. Moran gathers wood from buildings demolished to make way for suburban malls and condos, the kind of architecture composed almost exclusively with man-made materials. He then cuts the wood into smaller geometric pieces, sorts them, and paints a few pieces to compliment a color on the found wood. Painted and unfinished pieces fit together by shared origin, in an order determined by their structure and how tightly this piece fits with that. The result is geometric sculpture in the round, with the oblique angles of an asymmetrical crystal. Moran thinks of his sculptures as monuments to things and places that no longer exist; the building, and the era it represents, lives on in the palette and grain of his sculptures.

 

Figurative sculpture typically represents a tangible body in our world, yet it is applicable to the alien and robotic forms by Andrea Petrachi. Anthropomorphic sculptures with articulated limbs made of toys and appliances from junkyards and flea markets are simultaneously familiar and dystopian, approachable and creepy. Italian artist Petrachi, also known as Himatic, creates these mechanical sculptures to draw attention to how consumerism is coercive and wasteful, particularly the manufacturing phenomena of planned obsolescence. The human faces on his sci-fi sculptures are apertures to how contemporary technology and consumption are changing humanity.

 

Jonathan Leach paints some of the more mercurial phenomena—light and shadow, vivid hues, ambiance—of concrete objects. His architectural abstractions in hard lines of neon pastel are painted on canvas and Plexiglass, the choice of support amplifying the subject. In Leach’s latest work, the subject form is also a function created by the piece; panes of Plexiglass painted with fine lines of color cast shadows to create the appearance of three dimensional sculpture. These pieces resonate with the energy and inspiration of metropolitan life.

 

Femininity and ceremony are explored through Vadis Turner’s mixed media installations. Her subjects are the liminal events of identity: menses, professional milestones, weddings, and death. These transitions are symbolically marked with vanities, wedding cakes, and wrapped bodies. Turner embroiders these symbolic spaces with materials that are traditionally considered for crafts, (ribbons, textiles, and pearls), or are markers of female fertility (tampons and birth control). Her abstract silk ribbon and flower paintings reveal their subject’s mortality, with titles like “Ripe Dirt/Fresh burial” and “A Rather Violent Merger of a Wedding Dress and a Swamp.”

 

Mirus Gallery is a dynamic exhibition space established by entrepreneur, Paul Hemming. The gallery features a program of contemporary artwork by emerging and mid-career artists in both solo and thematically organized group shows. Mirus Gallery will highlight work that emphasizes skill and process and aims to engage viewers on a sentient, emotional and evocative level.

 

In 2013, the initiation of an artist-in-residency program will pursue the gallery’s values of community and collaboration by providing a live-in/on-site studio space for artists to make and exhibit work in a supportive environment, conducive to creativity.

 

Gallery Hours

Tuesday – Saturday 10-6

 

Location

540 Howard Street

San Francisco, CA

94105

 

Gallery Contact

monica@mirusgallery.com




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