Main | Back to the Drawing Board-August 15 – September 3, 2017 »
Friday
Nov102017

The Cave of Forgotten Dreams - the Non-mimetic Self-Portrait

 

THE CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS: THE NON-MIMETIC SELF PORTRAIT
Curated by Steven Holmes
OCT 31 - DEC 17  JOSELOFF GALLERY, Hartford, CT
What is a portrait? Is it a likeness, only? Can a portrait be a likeness, but not be ‘about’ the subject? Is a portrait about the artist, or the subject? Can a self-portrait not be about the self? Or is there a way in which all art is, in the end, about the artist – and therefore all art is self-portraiture? The self-portrait is in some senses the most fundamental of artworks. The first work of art, handprints on a cave left 50,000 years ago was – simply - a self-portrait.
I am.
I was.
In this way, the self-portrait is a trace element in the history of consciousness. The human drive – expressed often as the drive to “leave a mark” – is the drive of a human subject to be seen, pictured, or remembered in some way. Much of human creativity arcs towards the monument.
While the artists in “The Cave of Forgotten Dreams” each make their own subjectivity the subject of the work exhibited, in each case the self is depicted not through mimesis, but through surrogacy, allusion, redirection or the refraction of the notion of self from noun to verb, from subject to object, or from self to other.
Artists
Marina Abramoviç
Robert Beck
Stanley Brouwn
Thierry Delva
Tracey Emin
Spencer Finch
Kelly Mark
Magnus von Plessen
Jennifer Reifsneider
Natalie Waldburger
Martin Wilner
ARTIST RECEPTION
Thursday, November 2, 2017, 5-7 pm 
with a performance by Natalie Waldburger

THE CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS: THE NON-MIMETIC SELF PORTRAITCurated by Steven HolmesOCT 31 - DEC 17  JOSELOFF GALLERY, Hartford, CT
What is a portrait? Is it a likeness, only? Can a portrait be a likeness, but not be ‘about’ the subject? Is a portrait about the artist, or the subject? Can a self-portrait not be about the self? Or is there a way in which all art is, in the end, about the artist – and therefore all art is self-portraiture? The self-portrait is in some senses the most fundamental of artworks. The first work of art, handprints on a cave left 50,000 years ago was – simply - a self-portrait.
I am.
I was.
In this way, the self-portrait is a trace element in the history of consciousness. The human drive – expressed often as the drive to “leave a mark” – is the drive of a human subject to be seen, pictured, or remembered in some way. Much of human creativity arcs towards the monument.
While the artists in “The Cave of Forgotten Dreams” each make their own subjectivity the subject of the work exhibited, in each case the self is depicted not through mimesis, but through surrogacy, allusion, redirection or the refraction of the notion of self from noun to verb, from subject to object, or from self to other.
Artists
Marina AbramoviçRobert BeckStanley BrouwnThierry DelvaTracey EminSpencer FinchKelly MarkMagnus von PlessenJennifer ReifsneiderNatalie WaldburgerMartin Wilner

ARTIST RECEPTIONThursday, November 2, 2017, 5-7 pm 
with a performance by Natalie Waldburger

 

PrintView Printer Friendly Version

EmailEmail Article to Friend

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.

My response is on my own website »
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>