Exhibition
Killer Cute & Last Truth Of The New
17 Jul 2021 – 28 Aug 2021
Regular hours
- Saturday
- 10:00 – 19:00
- Tuesday
- 10:00 – 19:00
- Wednesday
- 10:00 – 19:00
- Thursday
- 10:00 – 19:00
- Friday
- 10:00 – 19:00
Address
- 3311 E. Pico Blvd.
- Los Angeles
California - 90023
- United States
de boer gallery is proud to present two group exhibitions entitled 'Last Truth Of The New' and 'Killer Cute'. Each exhibition housed in the two de boer gallery buildings are now on view through August 28th from Tuesday – Saturday from 10am-5pm.
About
KILLER CUTE
JULY 17 - AUGUST 28, 2021
Dan Attoe, Zach Armstrong, Kirsten Deirup, Corinne von Lebusa, Stacy Leigh, Stephen McClintock, Alissa McKendrick, Claire Milbrath, Emily Marie Miller, Luke O’Halloran, Calliope Pavlides, Marika Thunder, Noelia Towers, Sandy Williams IV
Opening Reception Saturday, July 17th, 2021 from 4-8pm
On view through August 28th, 2021
killer (adj.)
1: strikingly impressive or effective
2: causing death or devastation
cute (n.)
1: clever or shrewd often in an underhanded manner
2: attractive or pretty especially in a childish, youthful, or delicate way
The ancient Roman poet, Virgil, wrote pastoral verses in response to the disorder and chaos of city life. Today, depictions of rural life continue to occupy our visual scroll as cottagecore enthusiasts such as Taylor Swift and David Beckham commercialize the aesthetic movement by sharing images online. Young people continue to leave cities due to improvements in technology and access to remote jobs.
William Shakespeare’s pastoral comedy As You Like It, sought to celebrate country life while its characters, who took on elaborate gender reversal roles, suffered the perils of injustice and even death threats. Prior to the Great Recession, Thomas Kinkade sold millions of copies of his idyllic cottage paintings, while the darkness within him did not always reflect the peace and serenity of his artworks.
Viewed with rose-tinted glasses and a lack of experience, romanticising about rural life can overlook a past where social norms were marked with aspects of colonialism, racism, and sexism. With heightened awareness, the opportunity to signal our own response creates mystery about what is right in front of us while seemingly being far away and mysterious.
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Last Truth Of The New
17 JULY – 28 AUGUST 2021
(pictured)
Lynn Aldrich, Teresa Baker, blvxmth, Sara Carter, Karin Davie, Dan Levenson. Ryan Wallace, Suzanne McClelland, Monsieur Zohore
Opening Reception Saturday, July 17th, 2021 from 4-8pm
On view through August 28th, 2021
de boer (Los Angeles, CA) gallery is pleased to present a group exhibition in Last Truth of the New, featuring the work of nine artists pursuing abstraction through unexpected resonances and histories of art.
"The truth of the new, as the truth of what is not already used up, is situated in the intentionless. This sets truth in opposition to reflection, which is the motor of the new. and raises reflection to a second order, to second reflection." - Theodor W. Adorno
What does it mean to put your soul on display? Does the risk of unpacking narratives make you malleable enough to understand a history other than your own?
Examining language, conceptualism, meaning outside of narrative, civil issues, and personal and spiritual quests for beauty, the artists in this exhibition present experimental expressions. The works in this exhibition can be described by their intention to impart disruption for revolutionary change.
By drawing from the histories of art and human civilization, the imagery and titles of artworks in this exhibition hint at their representational origins. Architecture, the landscape, the environment, labor, figuration, time, and truth are themes explored. At its core, the works in this exhibition are rooted in lived experience and examine how forces such as migration, capitalism, and climate change can impact human populations and possibilities.