You are here

Amalgamation

Country:

City:

Categories:

Date: 
Thursday, 15 October 2015
Opening: 
Thursday, 15 October 2015 - 6:00pm to 8:00pm
A Farewell To Arms

Joshua Liner Gallery is pleased to present Amalgamation, an exhibition of new work from Kansas-based artist Kris Kuksi. This will be Kuksi’s fifth solo offering with the gallery and will include eight works in the artist’s signature medium of mixed media assemblage. The artist will be in attendance for an opening reception on Thursday, October 15, 2015.

When observing the delicate wall assemblages Kris Kuksi constructs, intricacy seems almost an understatement. Excessively detailed, each work plays out an epic drama meticulously assembled piece by piece. Largely influenced by the ornamental details of the Late Baroque and Rococo movements, these embellished pieces possess a darkness. Chaos, downfall, and anguish are poignant struggles amongst Kuksi’s miniature models, their plight serving as commentary on humanity’s social, political and spiritual obstacles. The title of the exhibition—Amalgamation—sheds light on Kuksi’s elaborate process of collection, and also bears reference to the multiple chaotic narratives taking place in each ornate piece.

Many of the central figures in Kuksi’s assemblages resemble deities, transcending the disorder and turmoil that surround them. Rage and conflict between the smaller, less dominant figures is literally below them. In Farewell to Arms, a mythical warrior rises above a mass of smaller figures clambering beneath, struggling to keep hold of their heavy artillery. Perhaps this profound difference in size between the godlike central figure and smaller mortal figures metaphorically reveals the sheer distance humanity is from total serenity. Kuksi elaborates, “Human beings are limited by their greed and carelessness yet they know it. Humans know how to be better and solve problems that are pressing the advancement of our species but we don’t always do the right thing. We are consumed by our darkness and yet we don’t realize we don’t have to be. I think if we can embrace our dark impulses, we can overcome them.”

The process of assembling these intricate works is complex and time consuming, and sourcing the right piece to fit can take months. Balance and placement are of equal importance in the construction of the assemblages, thus resulting in the majority of the works having a symmetrical appearance. Kuksi explains, “It is balance of chaos vs. symmetry which can take lots of time just thinking out the arrangement for balance and control, rushing the process will leave too much chaos.” Aside from the painstaking arrangement of each assemblage, the artist pays special attention to every individual piece, hand painting them with careful patience. In many cases, the final result is unknown and it is the process of assemblage that builds the narrative and speaks to the artist.

Over the many hours spent constructing a piece, Kuksi develops a fondness for each work as he explains, “I will love a new piece I’m building and I will sink in sadness to have to come to an end just to finish it.” However, the necessity to move on and begin another work is vital to the artist’s ambition as he explains, “My hope is that my art is a tool for recognition, at least in the short term. Tomorrow is always a new struggle and a new fight to survival.”

Born in 1973 in Springfield, Missouri, Kris Kuksi earned his BFA and MFA in painting at Fort Hays State University and works in Hays, Kansas. Solo exhibitions of his work include Revival (2013), Triumph (2012), Beast Anthology (2009), and Imminent Utopia (2008) at Joshua Liner Gallery, New York; Antiquity in the Faux at Mark Moore Gallery, Culver City (2014); The Strange and The Fantastic, Leedy-Voulkos Art Center, Kansas City, MO (2004); and The Within, Fraser Gallery, Washington, DC (2003). Selected group exhibitions include SHOWcabinet curated by Iris van Herpen at SHOWstudio, London, UK (2013); Hey! Modern Art & Pop Culture, Halle Saint Pierre, Paris, France (2011); Paradise Lost, Williamsburg Art and Historical Center, Brooklyn (2008); and Flights of Imagination, Museum HR Giger, Gruyères, Switzerland (2006).

Reception Thursday October 15 from 6-8pm

Artist ( Description ): 

Kris Kuksi 

Venue ( Address ): 

540 West 28th Street

New York, NY

10001

Other events from Joshua Liner Gallery

view
Wayne White: I DON'T KNOW
01/09/2020 to 02/08/2020
view
Bounty: Kris Kuksi and Mark Wagner
11/21/2019 to 12/21/2019
view
Arno Beck: Screengrabs
11/21/2019 to 12/21/2019
view
Intertwined: Serena Mitnik-Miller and Stephen Ormandy
10/10/2019 to 11/09/2019

Pages

 

Related Shows This Week

view
Opening Reception:WOMEN PAINTERS WEST - Dreams & Imaginings Group Show featuring 33 Artists
03/16/2024 to 05/04/2024
view
Art Share L.A. Open Studios - Ellsworth Artist Residency Program
03/30/2024
view
Jen Okumura - 'Self Awareness and Love: All-Inclusive Works'
02/03/2024 to 03/30/2024
view
CAROLINE GRAY: Undercurrents
03/16/2024 to 05/11/2024
view
Expoziție de pictură Ioan Avrămuț
03/28/2024 to 04/14/2024
view
CONTROL GALLERY PRESENTS CHEAP THRILLS & TONS OF SMOKE FOR MAXIMUM JOY: AN EXHIBITION OF WORKS FROM GUILLAUME OLLIVIER
03/01/2024 to 04/13/2024
view
„APA- interferențe culturale”
03/20/2024 to 05/20/2024
view
"True Nature" Solo Art Exhibit by Karen Sikie
03/01/2024 to 03/30/2024

Pages