top of page
cathouse FUNeral logo.jpg
1_entrance.jpg

FOR THE LOVE OF AGNES AND BARNEY

March 14 thru April 6, 2014

Michael Ashkin . Leslie Brack . Anne Deleporte . David Dixon . Shadi Harouni . Pete Moran . Chris Nau . Luisa Rabbia . Douglas Ross . Evan Daniel Smith

"Bedford & Bowery" article about Evan Daniel Smith: Life of a Piformance Artist by Alistair Mackay

Lecture for the Love of Agnes and Barney

by David Dixon, Harvard University

2_view.jpg
3_view.jpg
4_view.jpg
5_view.jpg
6_anne_barnett.jpg

Anne Deleporte, "Two Lanes", 2013 with Barnett Newman Catalogue Raisonné

7_douglas_ross_luisa_rabbia.jpg

Douglas Ross, "Stitch painting (Night)", 1993 and Luisa Rabbia, "Almost", 2013

8_rabbia_detail.jpg

Detail, "Almost", Rabbia

9_ross_detail.jpg

Detail, "Stitch painting (Night)", Ross

10_ashkin.jpg

Michael Ashkin, "no. 108", 1999

11_ashkin_detail .jpg

Detail, "no. 108", Ashkin

12_ashkin_photo.jpg

Michael Ashkin, "Who's Afraid of Integrity, Security, and Survival", 2013

13_shadi_harouni.jpg

Shadi Harouni,"Eraser Phase 1: Paved Over. Toilets in Abdolabad", 2014

14_evan_smith_chris_nau.jpg

Evan Daniel Smith, "Pi, First 1000 Digits", 2014 and Chris Nau, "Incursive Recursive", 2014

15_nau_detail.jpg

Detail, "Incursive Recursive", Nau

16_evan_smith2.jpg

Evan Daniel Smith, "Pi, First 1000 Digits", 2014

17_smith_detail.jpg

Detail, "Pi, First 1000 Digits", Smith

18_evan_smith1.jpg

Evan Daniel Smith, "Pi-formance", 2013

19_smith1_detail.jpg

Evan Daniel Smith, "Pi-formance", 2013

20_leslie_brack2.jpg

Leslie Brack, "Dear grandma" (watercolor on paper), 2013

21_leslie_brack.jpg

Leslie Brack, "My life is to hard." (watercolor on paper), 2012

22_cathouse_2x4.jpg

Cathouse FUNeral harvesting, "2x4, Shrink it Pink it -> For the Love of Agnes and Barney", 2014

23_pete_moran.jpg

Pete Moran, "Untitled (Cathedral)", 2012

24_dixon.jpg

David Dixon, "Wailing Wall, Onement (Painters Painting, Karencita)", 2011

25_names.jpg

Artist List

27_douglas_and.jpg

Opening night, artist Douglas Ross (center)

28_suzy_laura.jpg

Suzy Spence and Laura Parnes

31_people2_web.jpg
30_jane_sarah.jpg

Jane Harris and Sarah Bedford

29_spinley.jpg

Dave Spinley and Djibril Toure

PRESS RELEASE

Neither Agnes Martin nor Barnett Newman had children, yet we artists, today, spring from them, the Eve and Adam of the New York grid: Barnett “the first man was an artist” Newman, tracing his stick in the mud, master of the vertical, upright, male, Jewish, assertive. Agnes “the art nun” Martin, subtle, upbeat on the horizontal, female, her pridelessness never signing the front of a canvas, Calvinist, loner.  Eating of the tree of knowledge, we have certainly digressed.  Yet, it is their dedicated articulation of perfection that inspires and still can be perceived as we continue to see, unabated, moving from pure abstraction to lived-life viscera and back again.  The artists in "For the Love of Agnes and Barney" do not necessarily adhere to their forebearers' ethos of abstraction, however, almost inadvertently, because of this abstraction's utter elementality, like genetic code itself, one can find it embedded in all that we do, proportion, scale, composition, content, politics, being, the unknown...

Agnes:  Now let us turn to abstract response, the response that we make in our minds free from our concrete environment.  We know that it prevails.  We know that it is infinite, dimensionless, without form and void.  But it is not nothing because where we give our minds to it we are blissfully aware.
 
Barnett:  If my work were properly understood, it would be the end of state capitalism and totalitarianism.  Because to the extent that my painting was not an arrangement of objects, not an arrangement of spaces, not an arrangement of graphic elements, was an open painting, in the sense that it represented an open world...not of a closed institutional world.

Evan Daniel Smith writes the first 10,000 digits of infinite Pi from memory on yellow ruled legal pad paper.

Leslie Brack meticulously represents, in watercolor, roughly handled yellow ruled legal pad paper scrawled with desperate pleas.

Pete Moran instructs how to install a vertical 2x4 stud.

Luisa Rabbia's vertical is caressed with a multitude of indexical fingertips.

Michael Ashkin addresses the scale of Zionism in the desert of abstract place.

Shadi Harouni shows the abandoned that is still thing,

David Dixon the thing that is still art,

and Douglas Ross the mistake that becomes the thing.

Chris Nau wantonly violates the perfected plane

while Anne Deleporte contributes a Two Lane Black Top, anticipating our screening of the 1971 film later in the month (more info to follow).

Opening night (which Evan Daniel Smith has alerted us is Pi-day (3.14), a good omen to ward off the impending Ides of March) look forward to live musical surprises from Big Klaw, the sax-man himself, Mr. Dave Spinley. And in the continuing spirit of Agnes and Barney, be sure to see the powerful Pat Steir exhibition at Cheim & Read; we are pleased to discover our shows overlapping.

bottom of page