Exhibition

Monica Banks: All You Can Eat

12 May 2022 – 18 Jun 2022

Regular hours

Monday
Closed
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00
Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00
Thursday
10:00 – 18:00
Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
10:00 – 18:00
Sunday
10:00 – 18:00

Free admission

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Kathryn Markel Fine Arts is delighted to announce an upcoming solo exhibition of Monica Banks’ newest ceramic work. Titled “All You Can Eat ”, this is Banks’ first show with the gallery.

About

All You Can Eat is an installation of over 60 works in porcelain by Monica Banks. Banks has recently been obsessed with making porcelain objects of daily use –cakes and teapots, mugs and houses – none of which are actually usable and all in a mix of scale. Some of the pieces are tiny – some oversized. And while these objects are all beautifully crafted with colorful glazes, each one contains an ominous element that undercuts the
beauty. The lovely pastel cake contains safety pins in the frosting and a homey mug is spikey and harmful.


Banks then combines these everyday objects in tabletop displays with objects that are much more dangerous such as pig hands and dead birds. These weird table settings evoke the pleasure of our daily meal and at the same time, celebrate the dark undercurrent - mostly unacknowledged and unspoken– that often accompanies our everyday activities. The resulting mix is invigorating and oddly funny. As Banks explains, “this series began with adding my self-defeating slogans (e.g., "you ruin everything", "no one cares", "why are you so...") to pretty mugs that could not successfully hold
liquids. This twist on inspirational mugs and souvenirs inspired me to incorporate flower petals, tattoos, slugs, eyes, teeth, stitched flesh, and other incongruous motifs into the tableware.


Banks has exhibited at White Box, Spring Break Art Fair, The Heckscher Museum of Art, The Carriage House at the Islip Art Museum, The Parrish Art Museum, The New Britain Museum of American Art, The Center for Architecture in New York City, and other venues. She created "Faces: Times Square,” a block-long sculpture which stood in Times Square from 1996-2009, for which she won an award from The Public Design Commission of the City of New York. Her permanent public works are located in the Bronx, Binghamton NY, and Charlotte NC. She has been exhibiting sculpture and doing site-specific installations since 1989.

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