Exhibition

Joseph Morris / William Lamson

28 Oct 2017 – 3 Dec 2017

Regular hours

Saturday
12:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
12:00 – 18:00
Wednesday
12:00 – 18:00
Thursday
12:00 – 18:00
Friday
12:00 – 18:00

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Ulterior Gallery

New York
New York, United States

Address

Travel Information

  • Essex/ Delancey Station on Subway F/M/J, or 2nd Ave Station on F
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Ulterior Gallery is pleased to present two solo presentations of work by artist, Joseph Morris and William Lamson.

About

The front gallery will feature works by Joseph Morris. The highlight is Immanence, a work made of membranes (plastic film), lights, and moving scaffolding (spring steel) that viscerally evokes the act of breathing. Custom software directs the process of inhalation and exhalation, creating an immersive environment in which the room itself seems to be drawing breath, eliding the distinction between the “body” of the space and the body of the viewer.

Another work in the show, Null Space, Between Breath and Breathing, is a set of two neon lights, each controlled by an individual particle detector. The detectors can sense subatomic particles and gamma rays that are so small as to pass completely through a person’s body without touching a single atom. When a particle or wave passes through the detector's sensor, it triggers the neon light to turn on or off. The two lights continually change states at seemingly random intervals, communicating the presence of an inaccessible hidden space that exists both within and without the viewer.

Morris’s work engages with ephemerality, perception, movement, space, and time to generate a subjectivity that is at once embodied and disembodied. The experience extends beyond the works’ physicality and evokes an evolving, indeterminate sense of inter-subjectivity. 

In the back gallery, William Lamson will exhibit An Invisible Universe, a single artwork comprised of unique, illuminated salt-and-glass spheres. The clear glass globes are blown by hand and then allowed to sit for months while formations of salt crystals grow from a liquid solution onto the interior of the glass sphere. As a result of this process, each globe possesses its own atmosphere and topography—a self-contained mineral world.

The term “invisible universe” refers to all that exists outside of observable space. Each individual light is an independent part of this larger, expanding whole, which will never be seen in its entirety. As individual spheres are distributed to different locations, the work creates an imperfect model of an expanding universe. This is an ongoing, long-term project initiated in 2017 and which continues as open-ended series.

In both material and duration, An Invisible Universe relates closely to Lamson’s newly opened, site-specific installation at the Center for Land Use Interpretation in Wendover, Utah called Mineralogy. Hidden within a former WWII armament building that is itself undergoing the organic effects of time, Lamson has created a fully furnished bedroom throughout which hundreds of vessels of salt water are repeatedly filled and allowed to evaporate. The salt encrusted walls and furniture evoke a sense of entropy and deep time contained within this ruin-like environment.

Exhibiting artistsToggle

William Lamson

Joseph Morris

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