NEW YORK—The Paula Cooper Gallery is pleased to present Invisible Surrealists, an
exhibition of new work by Sam Durant. The show, on view from September 12 to
October 18 at 521 West 21st Street, will include intricate graphite drawings alongside
mixed-media sculpture.
Inspired by Robin D.G. Kelleyʼs essay, “Keepinʼ it (Sur)real: Dreams of the Marvelous,”
Durantʼs new body of work revisits the history of Surrealism, casting light on lesserknown
members of the movement from the Francophone colonies. Using iconic group
photographs of the celebrated Paris-based founders of the movement like André Breton,
Man Ray and Leon Trotsky, Durant alters the images, inserting a number of overlooked
artists such as Wifredo Lam, René Ménil, Aimé and Suzanne Césaire, Jules Monnerot
and Joyce Mansour.
By revising the Eurocentric narrative and creating new archival imagery, Durantʼs
drawings question the photographʼs ability to represent history, exposing it instead as an
instrument with which collective amnesia and repression are perpetuated.
Durant also seeks to renew the original spirit of Surrealism—oppositional, radical and
revolutionary—which came about as a reaction to the cataclysm of World War I.
Coinciding with the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the war, Invisible Surrealists
explores the relationship between combat and art, especially through the phenomena of
“Trench Art.” In one sculpture, Durant transforms heavy caliber shells into bells for a
large wind chime, and in another, he assembles a collection of trench warfare objects on
a stage-like platform, highlighting their sculptural qualities.
Durantʼs method of intertwining historical and cultural events of the past and the present
is a recurring theme within his work. He has focused on such pivotal periods as the civilrights
era, the 1968 student riots, and last centuryʼs struggle between Native Americans
and European settlers. Durant has been the subject of one-person exhibitions at the
Museo d'arte contemporanea, Rome; the Getty Center, Los Angeles; the Wadsworth
Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles;
the Kunstverein Düsseldorf; the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Massachusetts
College of Art, Boston. His most recent group exhibitions include dOCUMENTA (13),
Kassel and See You In The Hague, Stroom den Haag, The Hague. He has participated
in the 2004 Whitney Museum Biennial, New York; the 2002 Venice Biennale, Italy; and
Out of Place: Contemporary Art and the Architectural Uncanny at the Museum of
Contemporary Art, Chicago. Durant's large-scale installation Proposal for White and
Indian Dead Monument Transpositions, Washington, D.C. is on view at the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art (August 3 - November 30, 2014) for the first time since entering
the museum's collection in 2013. Durant lives and works in Los Angeles.
For more information, please contact the gallery: (212) 255-1105; [email protected]