Exhibition
Chris Collins: Heap of Broken Images
4 Feb 2023 – 18 Mar 2023
Regular hours
- Saturday
- 11:00 – 17:00
- Tuesday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Wednesday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Thursday
- 10:00 – 18:00
- Friday
- 10:00 – 18:00
Free admission
Address
- 9002 Melrose Avenue
- West Hollywood
California - 90069
- United States
Chris Collins' new works in collage and sculpture are created by tearing apart and reassembling found images and objects to unearth novel perspectives in the familiar trappings of material culture.
About
Louis Stern Fine Arts is pleased to present a selection of sculpture and paper collage works by Chris Collins (b. 1980). In the language of cast metal and discarded magazines, these works contemplate the “heap of broken images” described in “The Waste Land,” T.S. Eliot’s 1922 poem lamenting the fragmentation and decay of post-World War I society. Collins locates a similar malaise in the contemporary media landscape, in which consumers are inundated with an overwhelming sea of images and information stripped of context. The works on view refer to this deluge of scattered parts while envisioning new possibilities in their amalgamations.
Inspired by the cut-up technique popularized by postmodern author William S. Burroughs, these works tear apart and reassemble found images and objects to unearth novel perspectives in the familiar trappings of material culture. In his recent body of collage works, Collins rips, scatters, and reconstructs images from magazines, art catalogs, street posters, and old photographs. Fragments of landscapes and figures with no immediately obvious connection are seamed together in a process of free association that transcends conscious intention. A reinvented order arises from the chaotic eddy of scraps, forming improbable tableaux that align and misalign in unexpected directions.
In Collins’ sculptural works, recognizable items are dissected, molded, and cast together in metal to form singular fusions of organic and industrial detritus. Obsolete electronics, discarded KN95 masks, and chunks of shattered glass are melded with palm fronds and delicate trumpet flowers, creating entities that forge their own relationships while retaining the memories of their original forms. The violent echoes of a bullet-riddled windshield and the accrued traumas of pandemic-era life, fossilized in bronze and steel, assume the solemn weight of a religious idol or a war memorial. Stitched together with parts scavenged from the streets and alleys of Los Angeles, these sculptures are inspired by the chaos and entropy of a city that collects and discards its fascinations with unsettling speed.