HOW YOU USE IT

Opening reception:
Thursday, September 6
6-8 pm (Open to the public)

On view:
September 6 - October 5

WHAT: How You Use It Featuring work by: Gigi Chen, Gentleman’s Game, Liz Pasqualo, Visakh Menon, Steven Balogh.
Curated by Aaron Schraeter


The Grady Alexis Gallery at El Taller Latino Americano is pleased to announce Artist Aaron Schraeter’s inaugural curatorial project, “How You Use It,” a study of how six different artists explore the idea of “object.
In her paintings of bowerbirds, Gigi Chen offers perspective in the inherent beauty and form of scavenged materials. As part of their mating ritual, these birds aim to create the most attractive and elaborate nest possible, bridging the gap between form and function, meticulously curating objects of all types and origins. The collaborative duo, Gentleman’s Game, uses a combination of objects in renderings and found images as major elements in their work to create a narrative. These components allow a connection with artifacts as clues to who the paintings’ subjects are, and where they sit within the fantastic world they live. 
In her paintings of bowerbirds, Gigi Chen offers perspective in the inherent beauty and form of scavenged materials. As part of their mating ritual, these birds aim to create the most attractive and elaborate nest possible, bridging the gap between form and function, meticulously curating objects of all types and origins. The collaborative duo, Gentleman’s Game, uses a combination of objects in renderings and found images as major elements in their work to create a narrative. These components allow a connection with artifacts as clues to who the paintings’ subjects are, and where they sit within the fantastic world they live. 
Liz Pasqualo’s approach to this topic is present in her paintings of graffiti covered properties from New York City’s streets. Here, the layers of competing tags evoke the subject of ownership. That door, window, or mail slot belongs to who signed it with drips and streaks of pigment – even if only until the next owner comes along to do the same with their own moniker. Visakh Menon brings the idea of “stuff” into the new age of technology through the back alley of tactility. Menon’s glitch paintings reference the digital sphere’s imperfections and anomalies with painted, inked, and collaged elements. This calls into question how we define objects when confronted with a realm where objects are no longer exclusively tangible, and can exist as ones and zeros. In his extensive catalog of works, Steven Balogh has historically used found materials to produce allegory through a surrealist vocabulary. His method of work ties specific recognizable items that, when combined, efficiently creates his story. His dance slippers, for example, contrast the elegance of ballet with the menacing image of clustered razorblades referencing the pain and sacrifice that makes a dancer’s gracefulness possible. Aaron Schraeter, the curator, is a painter and sculptor working primarily in reclaimed material, defining found objects as characters. He received his MFA from CUNY, Queens College in 2012. His work is widely shown and collected in New York City.

El Taller Latino Americano