John Almanza and Dave Hardy
3/2/2012- 4/15/2012
OPENING RECEPTION: Friday, March 2nd, 7-10pm
The paintings of John Almanza and the sculptures of Dave Hardy reflect the reckless abandon of progress, with an emphasis on looking at how materials get relegated to the side as other forces push forward. Indulging in the abundances available to them, both artists consider excess and overflow as vital to the physicality and construction of their work. Almanza’s viscous oil paintings rely on a process of application and removal of paint. While the paintings are still wet, he traverses the canvas with a thin strip of plywood—simultaneously scraping away paint with the swipe of a line and adding paint that is carried across on the plywood. This forms a pattern of hard parallel lines that reveals underlying ghosted abstractions perpetually in limbo. Hardy’s sculptures of found glass, foam and an assortment of other materials build tension from the interplay between hard and soft edges. Engineered to confound notions of structural integrity, these works borrow from the urgent language of provisional architecture as well as from the assertive gestures of modernist sculpture.
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Press:
The 12 Best Brooklyn Art Shows of 2012 The L Magazine: Paul D’Agostino
14 Shows You’ve Gotta See in April Art Fag City: Anthony Espino
Notes from Bushwick: Luhring Augustine, Big Reality, and Regina Rex the art blog: emmy thelander
Bushwick Art Openings: Tattooed Babies and Indestructible Books The L Magazine: Paul D’Agostino
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Installation view.
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John Almanza Untitled 2011 oil on canvas 21 x 29 inches
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John Almanza Until You Feel at Home 2011 oil on canvas 33 x 47 inches
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Dave Hardy Chinook 2012 cement, clay, glass, teak, pine, foam 51 x 98 x 31 inches
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Dave Hardy Verge D’Or 2012 glass, tape, walnut, teak, foam, cement, pen, pencils, ink, marker 93 x 52 x 39 inches
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John Almanza How Not to Read Right 2012 oil on canvas 48 x 72 inches
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Installation view
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Installation view
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