LOS ANGELES, October
2002 – Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions presented a solo
exhibition of new sculpture by Ruby Neri that ran 16 November, 2002
through18 January, 2003. An opening reception took place on 16 November
2002 from 6 - 8 pm. The artist spoke about her work during a joint
artists’ presentation with Alice Könitz on 17 January,
2003 at 7 pm. This exhibition was organized by Irene Tsatsos.
In her project for Los
Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, Ruby Neri presented a selection
of figurative sculpture, ranging from a 7-foot tall horse to busts
to owls and birds. Neri’s figures challenge certain conceptual
expectations in contemporary art, while celebrating a tradition
of statuary and the "noble" figure. For some, the term
"statue" might seem derogatory or dismissive, calling
to mind Hummel figures or forgotten heroes in the park, more interesting
to pigeons than people. But with influences such as Constantin Brancusi,
or the 19th century American sculptor Hiram Powers, Neri’s
use of traditionalism serves a specific purpose.
Made of plaster and painted
in varying degrees of realism, Neri’s menagerie represented
a conflation of naturalism and imagination. Powers presented his
subjects in an amalgamation of then-contemporary and Greek classical
styles in order to infuse his present with the values and aesthetics
he admired. Neri, meanwhile, adopted popular subject matter and
presented it in a traditional style to present her vision of what
is currently interesting and admirable. This strategy provided her
a means to write a cultural future that embraces a rich range of
elements and references that are spatial, temporal, cultural and
virtual. While figuration is often charged with being too literal,
Neri’s sculptures were, instead, illustrative of what might
be, what could be, or what should be.
Neri’s sculptures
were constructed from the inside out. Citing text, anatomy, and
picture books as potential source material, Neri formed a concrete
understanding of her subjects’s interiors, getting beneath
their skin - literally and culturally - to redefine their surfaces.
Further, the bases of Neri’s sculptures were intrinsic to
the structure and surface, acting as conceptual extensions of the
figure into the space in which it was placed, much like Brancusi’s
"Bird in Flight." Through her mediation of the material,
Neri elevated the effigy to a place of loftiness and wonder, making
it both overly familiar and sublime.
Neri’s effigies function as archetypes and signs of something
larger than meanings of the references from which they were drawn.
As Powers and his peers sought to build a national identity through
their creations, Neri’s re-constructions built the global
identity in which we are all complicit.
Admission to Los Angeles
Contemporary Exhibitions is free with a recommended donation of
$3.00 ($2.00 students, members free). Gallery hours are Wednesday
– Sunday 12 - 6 pm, Friday 12 – 9 pm. Call 323.957.1777
for parking information, directions, and additional information.