
TRACEY MOFFATT
LOVE AND ADVENTURES
TO BE EXHIBITED AT STEVEN KASHER GALLERY
MARCH 7, 2006 THROUGH APRIL 29, 2006
Opening reception from 6-8pm on Tuesday, March 7, 2006
The Steven Kasher Gallery is pleased to announce that we are now serving as Tracey Moffatt’s
exclusive
representative in the United States. Our first exhibition of Moffatt’s work, entitled Love
and Adventures, features
both photography and video. It is Moffatt’s first exhibition in New York since 2001.
Tracey Moffatt is Australia’s most accomplished visual artist. She has exhibited extensively
all over the world and has
garnered strong support from museums, critics and collectors. Since 1989, Moffatt has had 119
solo exhibits and
has been featured in over 150 group exhibitions.
Adventure Series, an eye-popping collection of 10 large photographic works that play with
pop-cultural staples such
as comic strips, television and B-movies. Moffatt says, “I love early-1970’s modern
adventure stories in comics and
movies, especially low-budget American and Australian television dramas. In these productions ‘adventure’ meant
jumping into a speedboat or a small plane to catch a ‘poacher’ and the stories were always
set in exotic locations.”
Each work in the series incorporates three “frames” that depict an open-ended story.
Each of the featured characters
represents a type; Moffatt herself appears in the role of the “dark and intense” type.
Moffatt states, “I like
constructing narratives in the studio with model-actors and props and painted backdrops…. I have
always liked
‘artifice.’ I adore the ‘fake.’” As a teenager, Moffatt aspired to look
like these televised adventure characters. Moffatt
pinpoints the allure of these characters when she says, “All the men and women looked ‘professional’
as if they were
doing something ‘important’ yet at the same time eyeing each other. To me it
was all so sexual and hot.”
Moffatt’s twenty minute video entitled Love also explores Hollywood conventions
and also turns a critical eye on
relationships between men and women. Moffatt writes: “Love is a rollercoaster
montage of some of my favorite
Hollywood melodramas depicting love scenes, which in the end turn out to be not so romantic.”
These love scenes are
drawn from recognizable films spanning several eras. In Love Moffatt elicits
a powerful response in the viewer
through editing and music. The selected film clips, at first romantic and sweet, captivate
the viewer and entice her in
as the scenes crescendo into the violent and frightening.
Love comes with a disclaimer: If you have ever been in love or ever want to be, do
not watch this video!
Tracey Moffatt is highly regarded for her formal and stylistic experimentation in film, photography
and video. Her work
draws on history of cinema, art and photography as well as popular culture and her own childhood memories
and
fantasies. Born in Brisbane Australia in 1960, Tracey Moffatt studied visual communications at the Queensland
college
of Art, from which she graduated in 1982. Since her first solo exhibition in Sydney in 1989, she
has exhibited
extensively all over the world. In the 1980’s and early 90’s she worked as a director
on documentaries and music
videos for television. She first gained significant critical acclaim for her film work when the
short film Night Cries was
selected for official competition at the 1990 Cannes Film Festival. Her first feature film, bedevil,
was also selected for
Cannes in 1993. A major exhibition at the Dia Center for the Arts in New York in 1997/8 consolidated
her international
reputation. Her work is in over fifty public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art,
New York; the Guggenheim
Museum, New York; the Tate Gallery, London; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; and the Museum of Fine
Arts,
Houston. She is now based in New York and returns frequently to the north of Australia where she
works and lives
on the beach.
Steven Kasher Gallery is located at 521 West 23rd St., 2nd Floor
Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 11 am – 6 pm
Tel: 212 966 3978
Fax: 212 226 1485
www.stevenkasher.com |