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APRIL 26th - JUNE 8th 2019
M. LeBlanc is proud to present ‘Model Of Dissolve’, an exhibition of new work by the Chicago-born Berlin-based artist James Krone.
In their darkened outposts on the peripheries of language, the figures of Pierrot and the parrot bump into one another every now and then. One squawks and the other raises an eyebrow. Etymologically, they share an origin (both coming from Pierre(s), French for stone (Perroquet, Pierrot) diminutives of the name for the apostle Peter, little stones) and also through their given metonymic personas associated with mimicry and language through their fragmented, opaque relation to it. The parrot, that only mimics the language of others when in captivity, offers speech without syntax. Pierrot communicates syntax without speech as if to say (without saying) that the words would only be in vain. Both figures lean towards us, cryptically, objectifying their own subjectivities and by doing so point towards a hollowness of language. In mimicry and silence they turn the tongue to stone.
I was born into the ideological ruins of modernity just several miles from the address of this gallery. The Cold War was petering out and the US was beginning to anticipate its own hegemony. I was told that this was all a continuation of the Enlightenment project and therefore confused. It took me a couple of decades to understand that my interest in abstraction had less to do with the various twentieth century traditions of reductive, non-objective expression (or at least in reading these merely as such) and more to do with the limitations of representational transference and non-transference. These limitations would mostly be legible through negative registrations, saturations that fed a leak. I’m interested in abstraction as a byproduct of representational processes that threatens the veracity of these processes. The works I’ve made for this show absorb matter from one another and accrue in a way that makes it difficult to say whether it is moving towards a density of image, a density of material or neither. They dictate their terms from within and superficially mimic tendencies from the other works, simultaneously.
We humans are especially pathetic creatures in our endless fascination with our own constructions and in the scope of our ability to declare or deny proximity to them as it suits us. Apparently incapable of negotiating any basic social or phenomenological event without holding out some sort of tool or weapon we try to preserve this short distance from the rest of the universe while we bake in its gaze.
If the prognosis of a totalizing, collective late capitalist schizophrenia is to envelope us, it may not be such a bad idea to gravitate towards a less terrified understanding of what it might mean to lose the distinction between ourselves and the space we exist in rather than merely to wait for it to be removed.
JAMES KRONE (b. 1975 in Chicago) lives and works in Berlin.
CURRICULUM VITAE
Work reproductions by Nick Ash. Installation images by Robert Chase Heishman.
APRIL 26th - JUNE 8th 2019
M. LeBlanc is proud to present ‘Model Of Dissolve’, an exhibition of new work by the Chicago-born Berlin-based artist James Krone.
In their darkened outposts on the peripheries of language, the figures of Pierrot and the parrot bump into one another every now and then. One squawks and the other raises an eyebrow. Etymologically, they share an origin (both coming from Pierre(s), French for stone (Perroquet, Pierrot) diminutives of the name for the apostle Peter, little stones) and also through their given metonymic personas associated with mimicry and language through their fragmented, opaque relation to it. The parrot, that only mimics the language of others when in captivity, offers speech without syntax. Pierrot communicates syntax without speech as if to say (without saying) that the words would only be in vain. Both figures lean towards us, cryptically, objectifying their own subjectivities and by doing so point towards a hollowness of language. In mimicry and silence they turn the tongue to stone.
I was born into the ideological ruins of modernity just several miles from the address of this gallery. The Cold War was petering out and the US was beginning to anticipate its own hegemony. I was told that this was all a continuation of the Enlightenment project and therefore confused. It took me a couple of decades to understand that my interest in abstraction had less to do with the various twentieth century traditions of reductive, non-objective expression (or at least in reading these merely as such) and more to do with the limitations of representational transference and non-transference. These limitations would mostly be legible through negative registrations, saturations that fed a leak. I’m interested in abstraction as a byproduct of representational processes that threatens the veracity of these processes. The works I’ve made for this show absorb matter from one another and accrue in a way that makes it difficult to say whether it is moving towards a density of image, a density of material or neither. They dictate their terms from within and superficially mimic tendencies from the other works, simultaneously.
We humans are especially pathetic creatures in our endless fascination with our own constructions and in the scope of our ability to declare or deny proximity to them as it suits us. Apparently incapable of negotiating any basic social or phenomenological event without holding out some sort of tool or weapon we try to preserve this short distance from the rest of the universe while we bake in its gaze.
If the prognosis of a totalizing, collective late capitalist schizophrenia is to envelope us, it may not be such a bad idea to gravitate towards a less terrified understanding of what it might mean to lose the distinction between ourselves and the space we exist in rather than merely to wait for it to be removed.
JAMES KRONE (b. 1975 in Chicago) lives and works in Berlin.
CURRICULUM VITAE
Work reproductions by Nick Ash. Installation images by Robert Chase Heishman.
Pierres (Haptic Gaze), 2019
oil on canvas
100 x 80 cm (39.37 x 31. 5 in)
JK1006
Pierres, 2019
oil on canvas
39.37 x 31.5 in (100 x 80 cm)
#JK1007
Somebody Else, 2019
1/6 scale grand piano (player), hd video 32 min
ed. 1 + 1 ap
#JK1015
Pierres (Krone Flu), 2019
oil on canvas
43.31 x 31.5 in (110 x 80 cm)
#JK1008
Pierres, 2019
oil on canvas
43.31 x 31.5 in (110 x 80 cm)
#JK1009
Somebody Else, 2019
1/6 scale grand piano (player), hd video 32 min
ed. 1 + 1 ap
#JK1015
Pierres, 2019
oil on canvas
33.5 x 19.7 in (85 x 50 cm)
#JK1013
Pierres (Peter’s Face is a Word), 2019
oil on canvas
23.62 x 17.72 in (60 x 45 cm)
#JK1010
Pierre, 2019
oil on canvas
21.65 x 16.54 in (55 x 42 cm)
#JK1011