Residency Unlimited

Just Cause: Maria Agureeva, Benjamin Brett and Juan Sánchez

Maria Agureeva: From the series IN THE Folds OF YOUR BODY. Untitled. 2017. 24"x 9"x 3"

Opening on Tuesday, May 9, 6-9pm
On view: May 9-June 4, 2017
Open on Saturdays 12pm – 6pm and by appointment info@blackballprojects.com
Black Ball Projects 
374 Bedford Ave, 1st floor

Southside Williamsburg, Brooklyn


Curated by Jason Tomme and Ana Wolovick.

A man wanders a beautiful but troubled landscape. Runs, drives, boats, and flies. He can benignly interact with many things. He can also blow shit up. (Enemies everywhere.) This person is simply on a mission, and the cause is just, because…well, just because.

-description of the blockbuster video game franchise “Just Cause.”

Black Ball Projects in collaboration with Residency Unlimited is pleased to announce Just Cause, an exhibition of three artists whose work can be viewed through the contrasting but overlapping spheres of thought and instinct. The title of the show is a play on the balancing act of committing to a “just cause” by way of conceptual concerns and intellectual reason, paired with doing something “just because”—instinctual and driven by a sense of chance and play.

All three artists are current residents at Residency Unlimited and hail from Russia, Spain, and the UK respectively. Maria Agureeva, Juan Sánchez, and Benjamin Brett explore painting, sculpture, and process in disparate ways but their work intersects where free will and “politics” collide. Politics defined here as:

the total complex of relations between people living in society.

What should be considered alongside this definition is the unspoken but critical role that the individual plays in influencing and deciphering this “complex of relations.”

Installation Shots:
RU Exhibition: Just Cause: Maria Agureeva, Benjamin Brett and Juan Sánchez

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Maria Agureeva uses her body to cast and create colorful and dynamic sculptural forms that reverberate with a kind of organic, bodily metamorphosis. These sculpture-painting hybrids invoke our universal desires for synthetic and material plasticity alongside the want for new skins of our own.

Juan Sánchez uses chance and poetics in his transdisciplinary practice. Sánchez looks to slow down aspects of daily life to highlight their impermanence and beauty. This quotidian focus often comments on aspects of labor and function, where for example, he has juxtaposed painting’s weighty history alongside a relationship to common household cleaning fluids.

Benjamin Brett paints quasi-abstract, quasi-narrative paintings. Brett invokes both the “vessel” and the “Macguffin” as points of reference. The vessel points to an open-ended starting point from which the paintings can be populated by the artist’s personal and societal experience. The Macguffin, a narrative device coined by Alfred Hitchcock, describes the physical object the protagonists pursue, yet it has no intrinsic value beyond propping up the narrative to pursue it. Thus, if the pursuit is the narrative, then likewise, the painting is the concept.

We are grateful to Black Ball Projects for hosting this exhibition. We thank Sugar Hill and Elements in Play for providing studio space. This program is also made possible with support from the Pechersky gallery, Moscow and 2016 DKV GRAND TOUR 2016.

          


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