|
ANNA JÓELSDÓTTIR
priest chews velvet haddock
Opening Reception: Thursday, November 19, 2009
November 19, 2009 – January 9, 2010
Stux Gallery is pleased to present the second solo exhibition of installations, paintings and drawings
by Icelandic artist, Anna Jóelsdóttir. This exhibit is accompanied by an illustrated catalogue with an
interview by New York art historian Jovana Stokic. Jóelsdóttir’s new body of work reflects her
refusal to stay in one place. As she goes back and forth between Iceland and the United States, she
also moves beyond her historic use of the canvas. In her idiosyncratic approach to objects such as
sticks or diaries or big three-dimensional installations, one can always trace her closeness to the logic
of painting. The artist’s previous series of paintings speak eloquently about this ongoing dialogue
within the language of abstract forms that are always somehow related to the logic of representation.
The new series of paintings entitled “chaos” let the artist tear down or build up forms that are always
in a flux. At the same time, her meticulously painted sticks show her idiosyncratic way of solving the
dichotomy between hard-edge geometry and her curvilinear abstraction.
Anna’s new three-dimensional installations – paintings on mylar, are site-specific. She explains her
relationship to space: “I am learning as I go… It is both thrilling and scary -- … I approach this
problem as a painter, I try to see the space as a painting, try to imagine things in a space like they
would fit into a painting.” In this context, her work finds friendly company in the works of artists she
admires such as Richard Tuttle, Sarah Sze, Kara Walker, and Mary Heilmann, among others. Apart
from formal investigations, these works are meant to be viewed within a loose concept of
metaphorical narrative. The title of the whole exhibition, “priest chews velvet haddock,” reveals
Anna’s keen interest in evoking surrealist use of language. Her title refers to fragments of thoughts as
equivalent to sounds and partial images. The viewer is trusted to “fill in” and make his or her own
meaning. Seen as a whole, on canvas, objects, and installations, Anna’s painting is intuitive and
process-oriented, always revealing distinct open-endedness.
An international artist, Anna Jóelsdóttir most recently had exhibitions at the Tarble Arts
Cemter(EIU), Zg Gallery in Chicago, Akureyri Art Museum, Iceland and ASÍ Museum in Reykjavík.
She has had solo exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago and Hafnarborg
Institute in Iceland. She has also exhibited at the Evanston Art Center in Illinois, the Living Art
Museum in Reykjavík, and the West Bend Art Museum in Wisconsin. Born in Iceland, Jóelsdóttir
studied at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago where she received her MFA. She currently
resides and works in Chicago. This is Anna Jóelsdóttir’s second one person show at the Stux Gallery.
For further information please contact the gallery at Andrea@stuxgallery.com
|