BOESKY EAST is pleased to present Ordering Nature, a group exhibition of works by Bjorn
Braun, Pier Paolo Calzolari, Spiros Hadjidjanos, Dmitri Hertz, Ryan Mrozowski, Helen Mirra,
Kate Newby, Thiago Rocha Pitta, and August Strindberg. The exhibition will be on view from
June 12 – July 31, 2015 at the gallery’s Lower East Side location at 20 Clinton Street.
Ordering Nature will present works that explore the relationship between human beings and the
natural world. Each artist begins with organic material, which is then transformed by a predetermined
restraint or formal structure. Often, the works are presented in grids, rows, or pairs to
highlight slight differences.
Bjorn Braun’s work is produced by recycling materials so that nothing is wasted, only repurposed
and transformed. Braun has raised a pair of zebra finches that he relies on to make his
sculptures – he provides them with colorful, found materials such as silver tinsel, brightly colored
cord, and aluminum foil, which they incorporate into nests that become sculptures.
The cyclical nature of Braun’s work is echoed in Kate Newby's glass rock sculptures. Newby is
interested in subtle interventions that often return natural materials to their origins. Her glass
rocks are a prime example of this as sand is both produced by the erosion of rocks, and is also the
substance used to create glass. These works speak to ideas of geological time, much like the work
of Thiago Rocha Pitta. In Ocean/Atlas Polyptych (2), Rocha Pitta presents a grid of twelve film
stills of a capsized boat afloat in the ocean as a way to chart the passing of time. Presented in a
serial fashion and turned upside down, the photographs of the ocean become near abstractions -
studies in color and form, differentiated only by the cresting waves.
Helen Mirra’s work, Waulked Triangle, is comprised of wool from two different black sheep that
has been woven on a triangle loom to highlight the slight difference between the two. A single
strand in the center of the work is dyed with pigment derived from a mushroom. Ryan Mrozowski
similarly draws upon natural materials to serve as a framework to explore ideas of repetition and
difference. He will present a new floral diptych based on stereoscopic vision. The repeating petals
serve as a formal structure that allow the eye to drift back and forth, underlining the way in which
a painting is read.
Spiros Hadjidjanos also uses fauna as a formal structure with which to explore new technologies.
His 3D Alumide prints are generated from Blossfeldt photographs of plants taken in the 1920s.
He scans the photographs and ascribes depth based on the black and white shading, which is then
rendered in aluminum-nylon composite and results in a kind of 3D bar graph of data.
Pier Paolo Calzolari likewise fuses the technological with the organic in Untitled (Occhio di Dio).
As in all of his work, natural elements, in this case tobacco leaves, serve as the framework for
ephemeral states and man-made technologies to combine. Framed by the leaves, a candle slowly
burns in front of the glow of a small, blue neon light. In the 1890s August Strindberg also
attempted to capture ephemeral states of light by laying out photographic plates on his windowsill at night in an effort to document starlight. Despite their celestial appearance, the Celestrographs
only captured a chemical reaction of dust and debris that had accumulated on the plates.
Dmitri Hertz’s sculptures possess a similar sense of facsimile. His wall-mounted sculptures begin
as epoxy putty casts of rocks into which organic materials such as grass and strawberries are
gently pressed. The resulting shells suggest synthetic fossils and hang on the wall to expose the
artifice of their hollow forms.
For more information, please contact Kelly Woods at [email protected] or 212-680-
9889. For press inquiries, please contact Elisa Smilovitz at [email protected] or 551-486-
3273.