FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Robert Yoder:
Landmark |
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ROBERT YODER diversifies his media for his second exhibition at Charles Cowles Gallery.
He continues his examination of decontextualized materials and turns often overlooked quotidian objects into artworks. In addition to his familiar cut wood road-sign constructions, this exhibition also includes works built from Legos and collaged from discarded luxury shopping bags. He deconstructs and remakes his materials as abstract assemblages. YODER’s compositions hint at aerial views of utopian landscapes without specificity of location. Reference materials like atlases and maps inspire his works visually but also inform his choice of titles. He gleans small-town names from frequent perusal of these resources to give his works a sense of place.
Graphically stunning, YODER's works are puzzled together leaving the letters and symbols on the signs and bags suggested, but illegible. Reflective paint shimmers with a metallic sheen when light hits the surfaces of the scavenged painted wood road signs. The grain of the wood asserts itself through the slick laminate adding a subtle texture to the entire surface. The collaged paper pieces echo a landscape with their creases and folds of heavy paper approximating valleys and canyons: a subtle topography of shiny and matte surfaces. The visible record of the materials' previous incarnations reflect an intriguing archaeology. The Legos, more sleek and uniform than their recycled counterparts, allow YODER a freedom to build his utopian vision by adding depth and color at will.
Born
in
Abfall, an illustrated catalogue published by Thread for Art with essays by Rhonda Lane Howard and Holly A. Getch Clarke, is available (30 pages, $35). A signed limited edition print is enclosed in the unique packaging of this publication (4 editions of 250).
The
exhibition will be on view at the Charles Cowles Gallery, 537
West 24th Street, between
10th and 11th Avenues in
There will be a reception for the artist on Thursday, April
22 from
For further information or photographs, please contact the gallery.
Above image: Harmon, 2004. Legos, 20 x 20 inches