MOLLY LARKEY: The Not Yet (or the Dictionary of Insubordinate Geometry)

  • LOS ANGELES, California
  • /
  • January 06, 2015

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Molly Larkey, That was also, 2014, acrylic and mix media on burlap and panel, 24 x 18 in
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles

"From the invention of letters the machinations of the human heart began to operate; falsity and error daily increased; litigation and prisons had their beginnings, as also specious and artful language, which causes so much confusion in the world." Henry Noel Humphreys, The Origin and Progress of the Art of Writing, 1853, here quoted from Johanna Drucker, The Alphabetic Labyrinth, 1995

"The here and now is a prison house. We must strive, in the face of the here and now's totalizing rendering of reality, to think and feel a then and there... queerness is essentially about the rejection of a here and now and an insistence on potentiality or concrete possibility for another world." José Esteban Muñoz, "Introduction: Feeling Utopia", Cruising Utopia, 2009

Dictionary of Insubordinate Geometry (DIG), #1, 2014, steel, linen, acrylic, 93.5 x 39.25 x 38.25 in;
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles

Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is very pleased to present MOLLY LARKEY: The Not Yet (or the Dictionary of Insubordinate Geometry), on view from January 10 through February 14, 2015. This will be the artist's first solo exhibition at the Gallery. An artist's reception will be held on Saturday, January 10, from 6:00 to 8:00 p.m.

In The Not Yet, Molly Larkey combines elements of language, painting, and sculpture to point to both impossibilities of communication in our current world and an imagined future of fluidity, movement, and the possibility of transparent meaning. This new work is informed by the idea that the basis of language, the alphabet, becomes an agent of oppression once it becomes a fixed system. It imagines a different basis for language, not yet as a concrete project of revolution, but as an individual act of imaginative rebellion. For Larkey, since this imagined language or alphabet can't be made real, it has to be brought closer to our field of vision through art.

This new work also speaks to our human condition as bound in contradiction, even as it rejects the dichotomous, and insists on fluidity of form and function. It longs for a language that names the subjectobject, the masterslave, the malefemale, the richpoor, the livingdead, the blackwhite, the allnothing, the infinitelimited. It points to our failed dualistic vocabularies, and how the structures of power that benefit from an either/or have routinely denied the neither/both a space, a name, even a shape or form.

Thus the individual works refuse to be held down into one category, incorporating aspects of drawing, writing, painting, sculpture, and architecture. The large irregular wall works further embody this dynamic uncategorizability, changing shape as the viewer moves: a line becomes a shape becomes a symbol becomes a painting becomes a figure becomes a sculpture becomes architecture.

Through their material construction and composition, the small rectangular wall works display a chaotic tension on their surfaces. The textures of plaster and paper mache, traversed by simple etchings and deep grooves that disrupt a painting's typical placid surface, evoke refrigerator-worthy amateurism. The attractive color combinations and simple patterns suggest inoffensive wall-décor, but the erratic finger prints and unruly gouges run explicitly counter to these Pier-One Import evocations.

Seeming to refer to an ancient tradition of writing, these marks simultaneously deny their symbolic value. This refusal to participate in any single recognizable symbolic system continues the exploration in Larkey's work of un-naming and undoing fixed objecthood and consequentially reimagining the potential for a pluralistic representation.

Molly Larkey (b. 1971, Los Angeles) lives and works in Los Angeles, CA. She received an MFA from Rutgers University, New Jersey, and a BA from Columbia University, New York. In 2013 and 2014 her work was included in several group exhibitions at Luis De Jesus Los Angeles. In addition, her work has been featured in exhibitions at PS1 MoMA, New York; The Saatchi Gallery, London; LACMA, Los Angeles; The Drawing Center, New York; Horton Gallery, New York; Ochi Gallery, Ketschum; Samson Projects, Boston; and Human Resources, Commonwealth & Council, Control Room, Post, and Weekend, all in Los Angeles.

  

For further information, please contact Luis De Jesus at 310-838-6000, or email gallery@luisdejesus.com.


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