FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jessica
Jackson Hutchins
Kitchen
Table Allegory
February
19- March 27, 2010
Opening
Reception: Friday, February 19, 6 – 8 pm
Derek Eller
Gallery presents a solo exhibition by Jessica Jackson Hutchins entitled Kitchen
Table Allegory.
Using materials such as papier-m‰chˇ, glitter, paper pulp, hand-made ceramics,
photographs both found and taken, fragments of her familyÕs clothing, and
furniture from her home, Hutchins imparts a mythic yet highly personal story.
It is a story that touches on universal themes of frailty and compassion,
unicorns and angels, the majesty of mountains and the beauty of natureÕs
minutiae. At the same time,
HutchinsÕ story is concerned with existence on a more personal scale: marriage
and motherhood, the rituals of daily life, and making art.
These
abstract narratives within HutchinsÕ work are perhaps best exemplified in the
showÕs title piece, a large wooden dining table, the surface of which shows the
residue of colored inks and the gouged-out tracks of a router. The table has been pulled apart, and in
the center, where a leaf might be placed, is a large ceramic pot. Before arriving in her studio, this
table was a fixture in her home, a focal point for gathering with family. And before it was disassembled and
fitted with the ceramic, it functioned as a surface for making colorful,
collaged monoprints, several of which are displayed throughout the
gallery. From well-used domestic
furniture to art-making vehicle and finally to work of art itself, the table
slips seamlessly from one iteration to the next and back again.
Another
large sculpture entitled Couple incorporates a worn loveseat which has been covered by two
spray-painted papier-m‰chˇ mounds; a ceramic vessel is perfectly nestled
between the mounds. The work could be described alternatively as: a mountain
range dappled by purple light, a womanÕs breasts cradling a precious infant, or
a couple groping one another on a couch.
A similar formal multiplicity can be found in the chair-like Recliner and in True Love Forever. Both works have surfaces collaged
with magazine images of scenic countrysides and gem-like flowers and niches
which support richly glazed ceramic vessels; they are at once bodies and
landscapes and furniture.
Hutchins
makes the most of the unique qualities of ceramics in several anthropomorphic
works. A work entitled Indefinite
Break (Tiger Woods)
is comprised of two parts: a glazed trophy-like vessel balanced on top of a
torso form which is raw and exposed in several spots and nearly bisected by a
snaking crack down the front of it.
As such, Hutchins portrays the tragedy of a fallen hero. Another piece entitled Wedding
Section echoes the
mounds of Couple
with its two heads balancing an upside down vase between them, and perhaps
references the delicate precariousness of marriage.
Jessica
Jackson Hutchins will be included in 2010: The Whitney Biennial and was recently featured in Dirt
on Delight which
traveled to the ICA Philadelphia and The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. She will also have a solo show at
Laurel Gitlen (Small A Projects) on the Lower East Side which runs February
20-March 28, 2010. Hutchins lives
and works in Portland, Oregon.
This will be her fourth solo exhibition at the gallery.
Derek Eller
Gallery is located at 615 West 27th Street, between 11th and 12th Avenues.
Hours are Tuesday - Saturday from 11am - 6pm. For further information or
visuals, please contact the gallery at 212.206.6411 or visit http://www.derekeller.com