FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jeff
Kessel
July 1 Đ
August 13, 2010
Opening
Reception: Thursday, July 1, 6 Đ 8 pm
For his
first solo exhibition in New York, Jeff Kessel presents a new series of
multi-layered abstract paintings.
Employing a palette which ranges from dark and murky to high key color,
he creates ambiguous veiled pictures.
Revealing visible signs of wiping and scraping, as well as geometric
structures either floating in the foreground or submerged beneath layers of
paint, KesselŐs work exposes the process by which it was constructed. At the same time, the depth and
complexity of the layering confounds, offering neither a concise nor an easy
reading.
Kessel
creates ŇconditionsÓ within each painting which ultimately determine its
particular internal logic and its unique conclusion. This action/reaction state of painting allows for an
important openness, leaving room for the work to emerge and then change into
something entirely different.
Also, this mode of working creates an overarching framework for the
paintings, no matter how disparate they may seem.
Filled with
chance digressions, KesselŐs paintings ebb and flow, and result in variations
for new paintings. His process
involves simultaneous control and abandonment which often leads to unforeseen
places. He explains:
ŇIn this
way the paintings have a life of their own; at times, itŐs necessary to step
outside and let the painting just happen.
Then, to become present again to deal with the aftermath. Sometimes the paintings just work, then
they can be very succinct. Most of
the time they donŐt, and the painting becomes about excavation, pulling back
from the brink.Ó
Jeff Kessel
lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.
His work was recently featured in the 3-person exhibition Parallel at Bortolami Gallery, New York.
North Room:
Michelle Segre
Michelle
Segre will exhibit two new mixed media sculptures in the North Room. In an effort to strip down her work and
let the materials inside emerge to play a more prominent role, Segre exposes
the armatures and surfaces of her sculptures, recycling parts of old works and
test pieces accumulated over time, and incorporating them within new
sculptures. The results are
unexpected combinations of forms which hover in the balance between spontaneity
and pre-meditation. Using
papier-m‰chŽ, wire, rocks, plasticene, and other simple materials, she creates
gestural abstractions that are both haphazardly composed and rationally
determined.
This will
be Michelle SegreŐs third show at the gallery. Her work was recently seen in the exhibitions Slough and The Visible Vagina at David Nolan Gallery, New York.
Derek Eller
Gallery is located at 615 West 27th Street, between 11th and 12th Avenues.
Summer hours are Tuesday - Friday from 11am - 6pm. For further information or
visuals, please contact the gallery at 212.206.6411 or visit www.derekeller.com