If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?

A Group Exhibition

February 6 - March 8, 2014

Valerie Jaudon, Almanac, 2010, Oil on linen, 72 x 72 inches (183 x 183 cm)

Valerie Jaudon, Anagram, 2011, Oil on Canvas, 54 x54 inches (137 x 137 cm)

Installation View

Sokari Douglas Camp, Waka Shege, 2011, Steel, waist beads, feathers, acrylic paint, 61 x 24 x 21 inches, 155 x 60 x 54 cm

Kathy Ruttenberg, Narcissist, 2014, ceramic, 18 x 7.5 x7.5 in (46 x 19 x 19 cm)

Kathy Ruttenberg, Secret Source, 2014, ceramic, 16 x 10 x 5 in (41 x 25 x 13 cm)

Dana Melamed, Error Shift Pattern 2, 2013, Transparency film, cinefoil, recycled industrial waste, paper, acrylic, charcoal, ink and wire on aluminum mesh, 40.5 x 47 x 10 in (104 x 119 x 25 cm)

Dana Melamed, DeSynced, 2013, Transparency film, cinefoil, recycled industrial waste, paper, acrylic, charcoal, ink and wire on aluminum mesh, 27 x 21 x 6 in (69 x 53 x 15 cm)

Installation view

Aaron Johnson, Ship of Fools, 2014, acrylic and socks on canvas, 71 x 88 in (180 x 224 cm)

Installation View

Josef Fischnaller, The Queen, 2013, c-print, acrylic, aluminium-dibond, 63.5 x 47.5 in (160 x 120 cm)

Josef Fischnaller, Isabella Von B., 2009, c-print, acrylic, aluminium-dibond, 47 x 47 in (120 x 120 cm)

Infantin Eva, 2010, c-print, acrylic, aluminum dibond, 63.5 x 47.5 in (160 x 120 cm)

Kinki Texas, Maulwurf-Man, 2012, Mixed media on paper, 17 x 11 in (42 x 29 cm)

Kinki Texas, Pangerra, 2012, mixed media on paper, 17 x 11 in (42 x 29 cm) 

Kinki Texas, American Bambi, 2013, mixed media on paper, 17 x 11 in (42 x 29 cm)

Kinki Texas, Indianer, 2012, mixed media on paper, 17 x 11 in (42 x 29 cm)

Installation View

Barnaby Whitfield, I Think I Miss You Most of All, 2013, Pastel on paper, 55 x 33 inches (130 x 76 cm)

Volcano! (like a flower in a frenzy?), 2013, pastel on paper, 16 x 20 inches (41 x 51 cm)

Rúrí, Silence of the Waterfall I.II, 2014, Print on glass, 10 x 10 x 0.1 in (25 x 25 x 0.3 cm)

Rúrí, Silence of the Waterfall II.II, 2014, Print on glass, 10 x 10 x 0.1 in (25 x 25 x 0.3 cm)

Rúrí, Waters, 2014, Print on glass, 18 x 18 x 0.2 in (45 x 45 x 0.6 cm)

Hamid Rahmanian, Execution (The Upside Down Hero), 2014, light box, 38 x 50 in (97 x 127 cm)

Dennis Oppenheim, Study for Hard Surface Tree #2, 2005, Silkscreen, 23 color, 60 x 44 in (152 x 112 cm)

Hamid Rahmanian, The Ambush, 2014, Plexi laminated, C-Print on metallic paper, 35 x48 inches (97 x 127 cm)

Dennis Oppenheim, Trench Fever, 1974, Color photography and text, 2 panels, 52 x 61 inches total (127 x 152 cm)

Heide Hatry, Ode to the West Wind, 2014, Wooden box, plaster letters, fan, metal, and 1 booklet with entire text of the poem and an original drawing, 16 x 21 x 17 inches (41 x 53 x 43 cm)

Heide Hatry, Ode to the West Wind, 2014, Sand emulsion on wood, paint with iron particles, Hydrochloric acid, 65  x 48 inches (165 x 122 cm)

Ode to the West Wind

 

Drive my dead thoughts over the universe

Like withered leaves to quicken a new birth!

And, by the incantation of this verse,

 

Scatter, as from an unextinguished hearth

Ashes and sparks, my words among mankind!

Be through my lips to unawakened Earth

 

The trumpet of a prophecy! O Wind,

If Winter comes, can Spring be far behind?

 

             Percy Bysshe Shelley

 

 

 


Artists

Sokari Douglas Camp

Josef Fischnaller

Heide Hatry

Valerie Jaudon

Aaron Johnson

Dana Melamed

Dennis Oppenheim

Hamid Rahmanian

Rúrí

Kathy Ruttenberg

Kinki Texas

Barnaby Whitfield

 

 

In the dead of Winter, even February can see a temporary thaw. Such moment of relative warmth reminds us that, from the raw West Wind blowing across Chelsea from the Hudson, eventually come warmer breezes to usher in the rebirth the blossoming of a creative Spring.

 

In this, the final section of “Ode to the West Wind,” Shelley takes a remarkable turn, transforming the wind into a metaphor for his own art, the expressive capacity that drives “dead thoughts” like “withered leaves” over the universe, to “quicken a new birth” — that is, to quicken the coming of the Spring. Metaphorically, this Spring symbolizes the possibilities of the poetic faculties, and the powers of aesthetic expression — a guiding spirit of this new group show at Stux. Encompassing painting, photography, and sculpture, the works on view each seek in their own way to awaken the allusive imagination of the viewer, sparking inventive connections that will play through the gallery space, building a new fire, stoked by this wind.