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For immediate release and listing:
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Further Group Show
January 9–February 6, 2010
Opening reception, Gallery I: Saturday, January 9, 6–9
New York, NY December 22, 2009 -- Joshua Liner Gallery is pleased to present Further, a group exhibition
featuring works by artists Damon Soule, David Choong Lee, MARS-1, Nome Edonna, Oliver Vernon, Robert
Hardgrave, and Tomokazu Matsuyama. The exhibition coincides with the release of Further, a new book that
brings together the seven artists and their varied takes on contemporary abstraction, mysticism, futurism, and
surrealism.
Damon Soule, a New York-based painter, depicts fantastic realms composed of geometrically abstract environments.
Resembling screen grabs from a video game, these scenes explode with pattern and manipulated
perspective, often resolving around a central image of an explosion or implosion, such as in the exhibition’s
ink-and-acrylic-on-paper work Space Positive.
By contrast, David Choong Lee, a Korean-born San Francisco-based artist, deploys the portrait within a larger field
of graphic patterns and contemporary mark-making. In paintings, painted cigar boxes, or as part of stacked
installations, Lee's portraits leap out from busy agglomerations of logos and street signs. In the exhibition, Lee’s
Red Cloud brings these elements together onto a tall, painted wooden column.
In his painting practice, the San Francisco-based MARS-1 (aka Mario Martinez) visualizes otherworldly existence
through highly developed, multilayered landscapes. His works include elements of mysticism, urban-Gothic, and
sci-fi abstraction, resolving into quasi-organic forms with a fuzzy-logic aesthetic. Also of San Francisco, painter
and mixed-media artist Nome Edonna explores contemporary issues through an updated form of surrealism. In
his fantastical still-lifes, medical and technological advances are recontextualized or problematized with shades
of classic Dada.
The Brooklyn-based Oliver Vernon depicts his own highly idiosyncratic “Big Bang” theory in painted works on
paper, canvas, and wood. In the artist’s colorful vision of the cosmos, nature and culture collide. Robert Hardgrave
of Seattle also works in acrylic and ink on canvas, creating phantasmagoric figures built up from basic, expressive
mark-making and complex shapes. Lastly, the work of painter Tomokazu Matsuyama will also be featured in
Further. Based in New York, the Japanese-born artist has developed a lively, colorful practice where ancient tales,
mythology, and contemporary visual design intermingle in works of figurative abstraction, such as the acrylicon-
canvas Runnin' Further Deep Study.
Joshua Liner Gallery, located in New York City’s Chelsea district, presents an exciting roster of young and
emerging artists from the West and East coasts, Asia, and Europe.
Also on view, in Gallery II: Robert Hardgrave, Momentous, January 9–February 6.
For more information, please visit www.joshualinergallery.com, or contact Tim Strazza at 212.244.7415 or
tim@joshualinergallery.com.
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