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BEN McLAUGHLIN - A List of Destinations

Type: EXHIBITION OPENING
Date: 5/21/2011
Time:
Location: Hosfelt Gallery San Francisco
Address: 430 Clementina St.
                San Francisco , California

 

Ben McLaughlin's anachronistic paintings are small windows into enigmatic worlds. This exhibition, representing the British artist's West Coast debut, includes approximately 20 new paintings ranging in size from 12 x 9 inches to 16 x 24 inches.

 

The title of the exhibition, "A List of Destinations," refers to a box of vacation brochures and travel books belonging to McLaughlin's father, incidentally collected over a period of years.  As a child, McLaughlin was captivated by the wealth of vicarious journeys they provided.  Rediscovering them as an adult, he was struck by their visual redolence to art historical precedents such as Romantic paintings and Chinese and Japanese watercolors and woodcuts.  Here were countless pictures of figures in landscapes, seemingly awed by their surroundings.  Interspersed with the splendid locations were more mundane shots of hotels, pools, and transportation.  These juxtapositions of the banal and the magnificent seemed to represent more than just vacations, and the ephemeral nature of the booklets lent them a particular poignancy.  The boldly printed dates of their issue announced that these anonymous every-men and -women, dressed in their mid-twentieth century suits and starchy leisure-wear, had survived the most brutal war in history, and that their Kodachrome-captured sightseeing and sunbathing was concurrent with revolutions, assassinations, and the crumbling of empires.

 

"I have ever since been intrigued by this variable, shifting gap between depictions of ordinary experience and recorded history - multiple realities that describe a moment," says McLaughlin.

 

McLaughlin's resulting paintings are, at first glance, unassuming and conventional - representations of places, some populated, some not.  Some show figures in elusive surroundings, or an occasional still life.  But although appearing familiar, the places are non-specific and artificial.  It's unclear what the inhabitants are actually engaged in, if anything.  These disconnected individuals are often on the edge of something, be it geographical or temporal: caught in some kind of Limbo.  McLaughlin's imaginary worlds are pictorial compounds - potentially humorous or unsettling tangles of the once real and the imperfectly remembered, framed through their titles by the date of their manifestation and a corresponding context from that day's news.

 

Ben McLaughlin was born in 1969 and received his degree from Central St. Martin's School of Art (London). He resides in London. The Paintings of Ben McLaughlin, a monograph published by Merrell (2006) with an essay by James Hamilton, is available for purchase.

 

www.hosfeltgallery.com


TYPE
EVENT
LOCATION
WITH THE KIDS
New York, New York
EXHIBITION OPENING
San Francisco, California
EXHIBITION OPENING
San Francisco, California
EXHIBITION OPENING
San Francisco, California
EVENT
West Hollywood, California
LINKS
HIGHLIGHTS
The Critical Moment: Architecture in the Expanded Field
Thursday, September 15, 2011
through Saturday, November 05, 2011
Cooper Union
The Arthur A. Houghton Jr. Gallery
7 East 7th Street
New York, New York

 

Debuting in the Houghton Gallery at Cooper Union, graduates of the Master of Architecture II Program will have their innovative 2011 thesis projects on display in "The Critical Moment: Architecture in the expanded field." The show, which is free, marks the first public viewing of the Master students' work. Without prescribed boundaries, the projects address a myriad of critical issues shaping today's architectural discourse, ranging from urban theory to the present condition of globalization and the continual emergence of new scientific developments and technologies. The exhibition illuminates the graduates' year-long extensive research using literature, photography, drawing, technology, history and urban studies to develop innovative programs, all of which feature configurations and narratives that bring forth potential solutions that may not be obvious to the viewer.

 

In 2009, the Master of Architecture (M.Arch. II) enrolled its first class and provides graduate students with an innovative approach and experience to a studio-based, design research post-professional degree. Open to applicants with a first professional degree in architecture, students are challenged to push the frontiers of design and form critical responses to modern and contemporary issues in the practice and theory of architecture.

 


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