Concurrent with Jorge Queiroz’s show, the gallery will present Ryan
Johnson’s exhibition Description of a Struggle, which takes its title
from the Kafka short story of the same name. The use of this title is
intended to reflect the sequence of contradictions at play in this group
of objects that attempt to cohabitate the tensions between sculpture,
photography, and painting.
Spread across both rooms of Gallery 2, large totemic constructions
placed on an expanse of artificial blue carpet create the initial
impression of an absurdist playground comprised of suspended
shapes, arcing limbs and brightly colored forms wearing shoes. Here,
pictorial devices are staged within and against three-dimensional form,
playfully drawing out space from flatness and compressing actual
dimensionality.
Johnson’s use of medical casting tape - the same material that doctors
use to wrap broken limbs - accentuates the stillness of the sculptures
as it is a product explicitly designed to arrest movement. Other
materials on display include paper, wood, acrylic paint, stainless steel,
readymade shoes, and rebar. In several works, the Futurist’s idea of
“absolute motion” comes into play as ‘time’ itself seems to be treated
like a physical material. An example of this is a sculpture titled
Ancestors, which consists of a twelve-foot tall tripod-like figure with an
outstretched limb that suspends a mobile. Visible on two of the circles
in the mobile are images of a recently discovered baby mammoth
paired with a photograph of an adult elephant from Eadweard
Muybridge’s motion studies. One shows an immobile specimen
petrified for 40,000 years in river silt while the other depicts the fixed
instant of 2/1000ths of a second created by exposing a light-sensitive
plate to an elephant in motion. Both appear to be walking, frozen in
near identical ‘poses’ mid-stride.
Another work, titled Occident, highlights the ‘silence’ and stillness that
sculpture and photography often share. In this piece, Muybridge’s
famous photograph of a racehorse galloping at full speed is
characterized as an oversized hobby-horse housed in an emphatically
stationary figure. Although seemingly straightforward, Johnson’s
painted constructions are difficult to pin down as they inhabit a
paradoxical space, a hybrid of illusion and materiality.