|
 |
|
|
|
|
OPENING RECEPTION: Thursday, June 25, 6pm - 8pm
|
|
Arario New York is pleased to present Paraphrase, an exciting group exhibition featuring newly
commissioned works by
Aakash Nihalani, Cui Fei and Minette Mangahas. The exhibition will be on view June 26 - July 24, 2009.
|
|
Paraphrase takes the act of writing as its starting point. The titlemeaning a restatement
of a text or passage; to put
something in your own words; or to give meaning in another formsuggests how these artists approach
long-established
written and visual languages. Nihalani, Cui and Mangahas translate word forms, characters and letters
in distinct ways, yet
their works intermingle and overlap in the space of the exhibition. The artists share a particular affinity
in their relationship to
the outdoors and site-specific practice.
|
|
Rising street artist Aakash Nihalani started bombing the streets of New York City
with his colorful isometric forms just over
a year ago. What began as repetitive silkscreen studies in the studio later developed into Nihalanis
signature approach to
open-air installations. Using tape as his sole medium, he highlights the geometry of the cityfrom
subway signage to a slab of
concretewith clean rectangles, squares and cubes. Employing the modus operandi of graffiti
writers, Nihalani revamps
public space, offering fresh perspectives and creating room for new words and ideas. His installation
for Paraphrase will
make use of both the walls and floors of the gallery. He will also utilize the windows that run along
Ararios south wall (facing
25th Street) to exhibit new works on mirror.
|
|
Whereas Nihalani primarily works outside, Cui Fei typically works indoors but gathers her materials
from nature. Using
organic forms such as twigs, tendrils, leaves and thorns, she arranges them on the wall to evoke the
vertical strips of
Chinese calligraphy. Her manuscripts symbolize, as she states, the voiceless messages in nature
that are waiting to be
discovered and to be heard. Cuis ongoing installation Manuscript of Nature V (2002-present)
will be on view along with a
new in situ piece composed of thorns.
|
|
Minette Mangahas explores the affinities between calligraphy and graffiti, thus relating the
two forms. For her series Flash,
she photographed, and interpreted graffiti tags on the streets of Oakland, San Francisco and New York
and interpreted them
through the lens of East Asian calligraphy. Mangahas studied with the celebrated Japanese Zen calligrapher
Kazuaki
Tanahashi for eight years. The title of the series comes from her experience of seeing street pieces,
which often have
people's attention for a flash of a moment. At Arario, the artist will expand on this series in
a large-scale wall installation that
incorporates urban detritus.
|
|
BIOGRAPHIES
|
|
Aakash Nihalani was raised in Jackson Heights, Queens. He earned his BFA from New York University in
2008. Since that
time, he has had solo exhibitions with Art Assets LLC, and 17 Frost Gallery in Brooklyn (presented by
Manhattans Bose Pacia
Gallery). Recent group exhibitions and projects include the New York Street Advertising Takeover, organized
by Jordan
Seigler of the Public Ad Campaign (2009); Hollowood, a Neo-Con Collective exhibition at Carmichael
Gallery of Contemporary
Art, Los Angeles, CA (2009); Street Crush at Alpha Beta Gallery, New York, NY (2009); and Piece
Process at Anonymous
Gallery, New York, NY (2008). Last fall, Nihalani was featured on the New York Times blog, The Moment;
and in a City
Magazine spread about up and coming young artists living in New York. His work has also been highlighted
by Wooster
Collective, a world-renowned website for street art, on several occasions. The artist resides in Brooklyn.
|
|
Cui Fei was born in Jinan, China. She received her MFA in painting at Indiana University of Pennsylvania,
and received her
BFA degree from the China Academy of Fine Arts. In recent years, Cuis work has been shown in solo
and group exhibitions
at important venues such as the Queens Museum of Art, Queens, NY (2008-2009); White Space Gallery,
London, UK (2008);
Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT (2008); Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, DE (2008);
New Britain Museum
of American Art, New Britain, CT (2007); Wave Hill, Bronx, NY (2006); and Chelsea Art Museum, New York,
NY (2006), among
others. Later this year, her work will be on view in the inaugural exhibition, Here and Now,
at New York Citys Museum of
Chinese in America. Her work has been cited in various publications including Art in America, The
New Yorker and the New
York Times.
|
|
Minette Mangahas recently relocated from the California Bay Area, where her work has been exhibited
and screened at
venues throughout the state. She received her BA from Duke University, and is currently in the Interactive
Telecommunications
Program at New York University. Mangahas has had solo exhibitions at The Sangati Center, San Francisco,
CA (2008 and
2007); MidCity Arts, Los Angeles, CA (2008); and SomArts Cultural Center, San Francisco (2006). Her
work is currently on
view in the group exhibition Calligraffiti: Writing in Contemporary Chinese and Chicano Art at
the Pacific Asia Museum,
Pasadena, CA; and will be included in the 2010 group exhibition Echo Me, Echo Me at Project Row
Houses in Houston, Texas
(curated by artist William Cordova). The artists first solo exhibition in New York will open at
Seobin Park Gallery later this year.
|
|
Paraphrase is curated by Nicole J. Caruth.
|
|
Arario New York will also display a selection of recent works by Sui Jianguo, Dongwook Lee, Ji Dachiun,
Seo-Bo Park and
other artists represented by the gallery in the remainder of the space.
|
|
|
|
|