Home Body at Spring/Break
Make sure to catch Codify member Jon Key's newest paintings at SPRING/BREAK Art Show in "Home Body," presented by Ross + Kramer Gallery!
WHEN
March 5–11, 2019
11AM–7PM
WHERE
SPRING/BREAK Art Show, Booth W15
866 United Nations Plaza
New York, NY 10017
TICKETS
Press release below.
“A man travels the world over in search of what he needs and returns home to find it.” —George A. Moore
Who we are in the world merely echos who we become in the refuge of our own homes. With “Home Body,” Ross + Kramer Gallery presents a dual show, curated by Ché Morales, in which artists Jon Key and Bianca Nemelc deal with mythos, identity, and what both mean within the sanctuary of their personal homes.
The first room titled “The Violet Den” is filled with work by artist Jon Key and is a constructed space of refuge and rest for the recurring character that appears in the majority of his paintings, the Man in the Violet Suit. According to Key, “[the room’s] surroundings simultaneously examine the interior psychology and reality of the Queer Black man.” By deconstructing the Violet Suit pattern and figure with each painting and found object abstraction, Key will extend the mythology of the The Man in the Violet Suit’s journey. Within this space we are given a reflection of what one man becomes outside the suited image that embodies who he is in the outside world.
In the second room titled “Motherland”, we come across a space created by artist Bianca Nemelc. This room and the paintings it contains are dedicated to the women that have passed down their ancestry through the home cooked meals in her family’s kitchen. Bianca states, “In any kitchen, the bowl is a vessel to explore the most intimate parts of our identity with those around us. A bowl gives the ability to share and carry lineage and tradition in its contents as it is passed across the thighs of unknowing company. Sometimes it arrives on your lap overflowing with stories of the kitchen from which it came, and other times bowls stand empty, waiting to filled and spilled by eager hands.” Viewers are encouraged to participate in a fully immersive experience as speakers play audio of women in the kitchen humming and cooking by themselves. With this space Nemelc invites us into the traditions of the culture that created her by feeding her soul literally and figuratively.