Mathew Cerletty presents Domenico Gnoli

As our fifth guest blogger, artist Mathew Cerletty presents the highly absorbed and abstracted paintings of Italian realist painter Domenico Gnoli. Gnoli, who passed away at age 37, was mostly overlooked before his death in 1970. Though he still remains a somewhat obscure Post-War Italian painter, a few of his paintings have trickled into the auction houses, widening the audience for his work. Both artists share a hyper-focus on seemingly banal subject matter, Mathew’s own paintings can be seen at his first solo show, Susan, on view at Algus Greenspon, 71 Morton Street, NYC, through December 17.

Patrick Michael Butler

Patrick Michael Butler is a photographer based in New York.

Neo Rauch

German painter Neo Rauch’s current show at David Zwirner titled Heilstätten,  roughly translates to “a place of healing”. At the center of the show stands a bronze Athena-like figure, arm outstretched, carrying an owl, chest eerily buldging with the heads of men. The same woman, painted as a fountain at the center of a town square, is hidden in a much larger painting,  easily overlooked in the complex mapping of ochre walls, lavender coated men collapsing, and towering trees. The woman-with-owl motif presents itself a third time in one of the show’s largest painting titled Aprilnacht or April Night, where two figures, one male, one female, both hold and examine large ominous birds. Only his is a fragment, a lone head; hers is complete. Her hand, clothed in a green sleeve, five fingers outstretched with the quiet command with which a mother would hold a baby, is placed, curiously, at the dead center of the painting. Heilstätten will be on view until December 17 at David Zwirner Gallery, 525 W. 19 St., NYC.

Rachel Budde’s Mythic Warriors



Rachel Budde works with a tradition of Persian and Indian miniatures, but her content is charged with sexually driven goddesses, sinister and unbridled cosmos loving warriors.

Brian Sensebe

Brian Sensebe is an independent art-director and painter based in New York.

Ayala Serfaty

Ayala Serfaty is an Israeli designer. Her intricate and beautiful creations are as much scientific as they are artistic, and utilize the most advanced green and sustainable technology. A selection of her light sculptures and her new furniture line are on display at the Cristina Grajales Gallery, 10 Greene St., NYC, through December 23.

Sasha Kurmaz

Ukrainian photographer Sasha Kurmaz’s work engages with youth culture, sex and natural beauty. Consciously or not, his compositions recall classical sculpture, Ryan McGinley, Hieronymus Bosch, even Flemish still lives, with a condom perversely wrapped around a knife, shining like a freshly caught mackerel.

About his work, he says, “Very often I myself, or parts of my body, are involved in the game.”

Eyes That Are Like Two Suns

These images are from eyes that are like two suns, a limited edition book by Brooklyn-based photographer Luke Stettner and writer (and Dossier contributor) Carmen Winant, printed in conjunction with Stettner’s recent solo show at Kate Werble Gallery. The photographs were taken on extended walks around Los Angeles, Palm Springs and Marfa, Texas. The essay by Winant is an independent piece of writing inspired by the photographs, as well as an tool which to read the larger body of work.

1.
If you see clean, smooth grooves in Death Valley you will know that a possessed boulder has recently passed through. The Sailing Stones are massive bodies of dolomite and syenite; Over immeasurable stretches of time, they glide in different directions without intervention, leaving long tracks in the desert floor visible even to airplanes flying far overhead. The force that pushes the rocks, or the speed at which they travel, is unknown. The impressions left in their wake, deep and even, are the reasons that earth scientists recognized them to be traveling at all. They are monumental agents, mute and persistent.

I sought to write about absence, mourning, about abstraction, the suchness of a thing; These ideas were never intended metaphorically, but now they cannot be anything else. I will write a detective story in the tradition of Raymond Chandler or Agatha Christie, both admired for their productivity in a genre that is a search for things gone missing. There are two rules I once heard for writing an effective short story, mystery or otherwise: 1) show, don’t tell; 2) create a character who is in need of something.

Here is a detective story I wrote about Sailing Stones in the six-word, penetratingly blank style of Ernest Hemingway: Despite prior impression, subject appears still. Better yet: Shadowless objects defy cause and effect.

2.
There are many classifications of metaphor: mixed metaphor, root metaphor, cognitive metaphor, submerged metaphor, destructive metaphor, therapeutic metaphor, frozen metaphor. In absolute metaphors, light is truth; Conceptual metaphors conceive of life as a journey; And in an extended metaphor, all the world’s a stage. But best of all is the dead metaphor, in which a metaphor is not understood to be in use at all. Its “death” is the result of having been applied too many times, its meaning progressively worn dull in the process. Falling in love is such a metaphor, as is being turned on. Managing to be both ubiquitous and extinct within language – and while avoiding metonymy – a dead metaphor is invisible (though never empty) precisely because of its effectiveness to describe and personify, making it arguably the most alive of all; the opposite of a dead language, buried by a lack of practical application. This promise: Assigning an article (the tenor) to describe a feeling (the vehicle) so astutely that they might one day bleed into each other is quite moving, and strikes me as a profound achievement of rhetorical expression and its capacity for emotional understanding.

This comes as a relief: Metaphor does not prevent us from seeking “true” recognition but rather acknowledges our experiences to be relative and conditional, and thereby unable to  be “found” in the first place.  It yields while resisting, an ontological tool that provokes connection by acknowledging the very limits of its threshold. Have you ever pretended to be blind in private? The desire to attempt whole awareness of our surroundings through partial experience is not dissimilar. In the moment of willed blindness, we enact the amputated condition of metaphor itself.

3.
My mystery story is a psychological thriller in which the protagonist seeks a lost photograph that will presumably afford him his true identity after a recent trauma has dislodged his memory. I demonstrate his yearning in steely prose, unfolding and refolding it piece by piece. The story splits cleanly on the second page: multiple versions of the narrator travel to different landscapes in search of the same clue. Though the narratives diverge, in each he encounters a shadowy foil and falls madly in love with different women, having the kind of sex that allows him to momentarily see in black and white. He never relents, but is always deflected. In the end the main character encounters the clue. It was directly behind him the whole time like his own shadow in natural light.

Je est un autre / I am someone else. Rimbaud wrote this line when he was a teenager. Translated by Lydia Davis, it qualifies as an intimate metaphor, which is to say the words are poignantly stated but economical in means. I believe in its tightness. Can you imagine exercising such overflowing restraint?

AD Projects Presents Camera Vivant

As our fourth Guest Contributor, we invited the curatorial team from AD Projects to contribute a post. AD Projects will be presenting an evening of videos on Tuesday October 24 from 7 to 9 pm, at the Big Screen Plaza. In the spirit of film they have put together the following:

Last year, AD Projects coined the term “caméra vivant” to describe narrative, non-documentary camera-based artwork that both captures a performative act and is created with the intention of being experienced by an audience as a video or photograph. We don’t often go around inventing terms, and we deliberated for quite a while before deciding that the concept deserved to be named. We presented Camera Vivant, an exhibition of work by emerging and mid-career artists, at the Central Utah Art Center in February 2011. These images explore this subcategory of new media where performance and the camera, both still and moving, intersect.

(above images: Lewis Carroll. Saint George and the Dragon, 1875. Kuba Bakowski, Ursa Major, Bobrek-Centrum Coal Mine, 2008. Gregory Crewdson, Untitled, 2001. Elodie Pong, Video Still from Je Suis Une Bombe, 2006. Narcissiter, Video still from Mannequin, 2007.  Robert ParkeHarrison, from the series titled Architect’s Brother.  Bec Stupak, Video still from Flaming Creatures (Blind Remake), 2006. Lucas Samaras, Photo-Transformation, 1976)

John McAllister

John McAllister’s color inflused still life paintings from his solo show Damned Sparkling Pomp, will be up at James Fuentes Gallery, 55 Delancy Street, NYC, through October 23.