Sunday, April 3, 2011

Picked RAW: Robert Matheny at Sushi Contemporary Performance and Visual Arts


(Arguably) New Work by Bob Matheny
On Exhibit in the Gallery April 1 – June 15, 2011

from the press release
For more than five decades Bob Matheny has been known as an influential artist and teacher working in San Diego. In that time he has created a wide-ranging body of work that is propositional in nature; viewers encounter comical, if somewhat puzzling artworks designed to advance ideas for their consideration. Sushi Performance and Visual Art has the opportunity to exhibit a series of photographs recently created by Matheny which feature as its subject matter the artist’s own sculpture, this time recast in seemingly conventional still life portraits.

Bob Matheny’s work defies easy categorization. He works across conventional media – painting, sculpture, photography, video and performance. He often creates work for highly unconventional settings – the air, the state of Utah, a single viewer. And he typically avoids signing his work, often attributing it to various personae or simply signing it “anonymous.”

In Arguably New Work Matheny challenges the permanence of meaning in an artwork by using his own sculpture and painting, which he has been creating since 1963, as raw material for still life photographs. In so doing, Matheny not only proposes that an artwork’s meaning changes over time, but he offers the public a glimpse of a highly productive octogenarian who prefers to make art without producing more objects.


Bio
Bob Matheny (b. 1929, Santa Ana, CA) earned his bachelors and masters degrees from Long Beach State College (now Cal State Long Beach). In 1961 he joined the faculty at Southwestern College as the first full-time instructor in the Art Department. At Southwestern he founded the art gallery, protested against the war in Vietnam, and battled administration about issues of censorship and academic freedom. All the while, Bob Matheny maintained an active art practice. His work spans all media, and included many forms which challenge a conventional art viewing context.

This exhibit is curated by Brian Goeltzenleuchter

Join us Saturday, April 30 from 2 – 5 pm as we celebrate this stunning work with a reception for the artist.

Sushi Contemporary Performance and Visual Arts
390 Eleventh Ave. San Diego, CA 92101
Phone: 619.235.8466
info@sushiart.org

No comments:

Post a Comment