143 Reade is a private gallery in a residential building in Tribeca.
“Le ciel est par-dessus le toit”
Elliott Green, Robert Moskowitz, Ann Pibal, a photograph by Noguchi Rika and a photograph by Luisa Lambri
October 1 – December 31, 2013
By Appointment
To inaugurate the second season of exhibitions at 143 Reade Street, Lucien Terras presents new paintings by Elliott Green, a suite of drawings by Robert Moskowitz, paintings on aluminum by Ann Pibal, and two photographs by Noguchi Rika and Luisa Lambri. This seemingly disparate grouping of works echoes one of the most beautiful poems by Paul Verlaine, Le ciel est par-dessus le toit, composed in 1881 while he was in jail. Confined to his cell, the poet can hear the city nearby. His only spatial references are the sky, a roof, and the top of a tree. Focusing on these reductive figurative elements he muses on his past, while the serenity of a present remains just beyond his reach. The simplicity of Verlaine’s style amplifies the evocative power of these images, a quality that is shared by the works of the five artists exhibited here. As in Verlaine’s symbolist text, the stylistic control of these works shifts the viewer from a formal interpretation to a more emblematic one.
Elliott Green’s latest works emerge as complex panoramas. Their depth of field begins to collapse as large brushstrokes in the foreground attempt to interact with a distant background. Green’s emotional landscapes seem to be a recording of simultaneous atmospheric events.
By contrast, Robert Moskowitz’s monochromatic drawings evince a much more muted and reductive atmosphere. In these drawings, Moskowitz has transformed blank sheets of paper into large open skies, which are only sparingly interrupted by schematic birds and minimal marks of spray paint. His stark imagery conveys a subdued yet alluring quality.
Ann Pibal, known for her small-scale works, presents three larger compositions dating from 2008 to 2009. Her precise geometric patterns play against color fields that read as elegant abstract landscapes. The subtle repetition points to notions of time while their backdrops elicit a sense of infinite space.
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The two photographic works included in the exhibition are early examples of works by Noguchi Rika, from her 2001 Rocket Hill series, and Luisa Lambri. Each displays the photographers’ investigation of physical spaces while calling forth a sense of transcendence.
Elliott Green has been showing his work since the early 90s. He was a 2011 fellow of the Rome Prize and 2005 recipient of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant. He has also collaborated on works and exhibitions under the Team SHaG moniker with Amy Sillman and David Humphrey.
Robert Moskowitz is one of the defining figures of the New Image Painters, a group of artists named after the 1978 Whitney exhibition. His work is represented in major museums around the United States including the Museum of Modern Art, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. Moskowitz has exhibited widely in the United States and abroad since his first solo exhibition at Leo Castelli Gallery in New York in 1962.
Ann Pibal is the 2013 recipient of the Rappaport Prize presented by the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum. Her work has been exhibited widely at venues in the United States and Europe including MoMA P.S.1, Sikkema Jenkins & Co., and Paula Cooper Gallery. Her work is in a number of public collections including The Brooklyn Museum, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Hirschhorn Museum, Smithsonian Institution.
Noguchi Rika was born in Saitama, Japan and lives in Berlin. Noguchi’s work has been included in shows at The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain, and the Hara Museum of Contemporary Art and The National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo. Luisa Lambri lives in Los Angeles. Her work has been included in two Venice Biennales and is in the collection of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago and the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, amongst others. Both photographers have pursued brilliant international careers.