Elliott Hundley March 30 – April 27, 2013
Main Gallery

  • ELLIOTT HUNDLEY
    Composition Blue
    2013
    Oil on linen
    84 x 168 x 2 1/8 inches
    (213.4 x 426.7 x 5.4 cm)
    ARG# HE2013-017

  • ELLIOTT HUNDLEY
    face and form
    2013
    Oil paint and paper on linen
    80 x 142 x 2 1/8 inches
    (203.2 x 360.7 x 5.4 cm)
    ARG# HE2013-001

  • ELLIOTT HUNDLEY
    Drawing of Head
    2013
    Steel, Neon, plastic, pins
    59 x 104 x 64 inches
    (149.9 x 264.2 x 162.6 cm)
    ARG# HE2013-014

  • ELLIOTT HUNDLEY
    Still Life with Backdrop
    2013
    Oil on linen
    78 1/8 x 60 1/8 x 2 1/8 inches
    (198.4 x 152.7 x 5.4 cm)
    ARG# HE2013-015

  • ELLIOTT HUNDLEY
    The Sun Goes Down
    2013
    Sound board, wood, inkjet print on kitakata, paper, string, plastic, photographs, pins, glass
    96 x 240 x 12 inches
    (243.8 x 609.6 x 30.5 cm)
    ARG# HE2013-013

Opening reception: Friday, March 29, 6-8 p.m.

Every piece in this exhibition embodies both the rich dramatic content and the powerful physical presence for which Elliott Hundley is known. Rigorous and vibrant paintings, hybrid painted collages, quintessential billboards and sculptures hold each of their own territory as well as take on monumental significance as Hundley pushes to further intertwine and contrast his varying bodies of work. In formulating a distinct visual lexicon he has achieved unbelievable freedoms - not only creating pure gestures but also allowing those gestures to manifest in complete, purposeful ways.

While content can be perceived through each combined layer in which materials are fastened, unhinged, glued and stripped away, it is ultimately in the making of the work that meaning is generated. For years he has pulled from his prior works – sometimes physically, sometimes metaphorically. A fragment torn away during the creation of an earlier work can ignite a new piece; remnants from previous sculptures will reappear in another. Pulling from an archive of his own documented works, Hundley lays down his past as a new foundation and history becomes material. Photographs of entire pieces may dissolve into under-layers of new work; a sequin can appear as an object shimmering in three dimensions or as a pixelated representation from another piece.

Hundley is a reactionary artist with a fine-tuned and specific index of goods from which he plies his trade. A thickly rendered, painted surface may be built upon a foundation of worn, stacked materials, and a smooth area may be made of countless layers of rubbed and fanned out paint. He cuts angular crevices into works to starkly contrast the flatness of two-dimensional surfaces. Through vast fields of printed paper and pinned photographs he delicately carves intricate channels, embroidered with a full spectrum of colorful thread and held by thousands of gold pins. The works are constructed in a way that is completely controlled but freely conceived. It is with strict intentionality and equality between painting, collage, photography, sculpture and hybrids of each that the work can be authentic and automatic.

While in much of his past work he has referred to Greek plays, Hundley is not only interested in how those particular narratives are representations of our shared subconscious – he also has a deep interest in how the recordings of those plays, for which there were never perfect versions or final drafts, physically and mentally manifest in perpetual reinterpretations. While this particular body of work is not about one specific play, Hundley takes mythologies from his own language so that the metaphysical and ethical quality of Greek theater weaves throughout. Utilizing his remarkable ability to join connotative content and pure markmaking, he is able to goad new reactions with psychological impact.

Always a natural collector and archivist, Hundley also has a deep love and scholarly understanding of performance, literature, history, film and theatre. Born from these passions, he elegantly stitches together a cumulative portrait of the world he sees filtered through the familiar. He builds elaborate sets on which he directs, stages and shoots performers and then systematically alters their scale, either blowing them up to billboard sized murals or cutting them into thousands of tiny figures. He culls from flea markets, newsstands, and art supply stores and enlists foundries and industrial shops for raw materials. By employing content-rich resources that are psychologically dense, he forms a kind of decentralized cultural map to magnify realities and achieve unexpected formal connections. Art history imparts a heavy weight onto mediums like oil paint, but, like any other material, Hundley then capitalizes on these histories by embracing them and unleashing their potential - by titling some of the paintings Still Life or Composition he embeds yet another layer of historical reference. Through sheer invention and an endless cycle of reactions he is able to chronicle the very actions of ideas.

This is Elliott Hundley's third solo show at Andrea Rosen Gallery.

Elliott Hundley (b. 1975) lives and works in Los Angeles. The Bacchae has recently been the subject of a traveling Museum solo exhibition at the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas and the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus. His work is held in numerous prominent public institutions including the Armand Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Broad Foundation, Los Angeles; Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humblebaek, Denmark; Miami Art Museum, Miami; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.

For press inquiries, please contact Jessica Eckert at j.eckert@rosengallery.com or Michelle Finocchi at michelle@michellefinocchi.com