Opportunity as Community: Artists Select Artists, Part Two
August 1–September 6
Closing reception: Friday, Sept. 5, 6–8 PM

Louis Cameron selected by Mary Temple
Sarah Crowner selected by Peter Simensky
Bruce Dow selected by Allyson Strafella
Marc Handelman selected by Vargas-Suarez Universal
Karl Jensen selected by Brad Brown
Joan Linder selected by Sonya Blesofsky
Liza McConnell selected by Kirsten Hassenfeld
Mike Quinn selected by Rachel Foullon
Christopher Reiger selected by A.J. Bocchino
Opportunity as Community is an exhibition for which current and former residency artists were invited to recommend new artists to create work with Dieu Donné handmade paper. Based on their artistic experience, this exhibition empowers each
residency artist through an act that is as much about generosity as it is about work.
For more information, please contact Catherine
C. Parker at (212) 226-0573.
Image: Marc Handelman, Study for a Composition, 2008, graphite on
book pages and handmade paper on linen, 55 x 42.75 x 1.5 inches.
About the artists
Louis Cameron
"I am interested in processes that remove my hand from direct engagement
with a given work. In doing so I aim to neutralize the emotive potential of
the mark. The result of such operations yield varying outcomes, from seductive
physicality to deceptive illusionism."
More info: www.louiscameron.com
Sarah Crowner
Sarah Crowner uses art history, specifically modernism, as an actual material
in her collaborations with other artists and historical works to establish new
situations and relationships. Working with "ghosts from the past" through the
filter of craft and the handmade—notably ceramics, paper-maché and sewing—Crowner
takes apart and reexamines modern art history, reassembling in a different,
more abstract way.
More info: www.nicellebeauchene.com
Bruce Dow
"In recent years I have made sculptures and drawings that echo, adapt,
and incorporate modernist industrial forms, from floor jacks, racetracks, and
motorcycles, to display stands, Pantone colors, and Eames shell chairs. This
drawing series using Dieu Donne paper is based on my longtime fascination with
the Cyclone, Coney Island’s eighty-one-year-old wooden roller coaster, which
comprises its own miraculous, barely contained universe. Possessing both elegant,
bone-rattling curves, it first offers glimpses of sky and water, and then lets
loose its weight and speed, emitting screams of pleasure and fear. Seen from
a satellite, its form encapsulates all this, yet remains an enigma."
Marc Handelman
Marc Handelman’s paintings have examined the visual and rhetorical legacy of
mid-19th century American Landscape painting, and how features such as the organization
and conquest of space, the seduction of and identification with power, and the
various naturalizations of ideology are marshaled and manifested in contemporary
pathologies. In Handelman’s work, light often becomes a reoccurring feature
addressing and connecting seemingly disparate subjects. Examining and employing
visual strategies that seek to alter or question the agency of the viewer, Handelman’s
paintings have also drawn from Op Art, fascist aesthetics, advertising, and
modernist painting.
More info: www.sikkemajenkinsco.com
Karl Jensen
"My work is a cross between sculpture and architecture. I draw inspiration from a variety of sources that range from the imagery of Moby Dick to the crystalline structure of a diatom and the controlled violence of a hot rod. My overarching subject is America, and all that is good, bad, beautiful and destructive about it. My model is the Gothic cathedral, which I love for its rich, complex form and capacity to tell stories."
Joan Linder
"In culture hyper-saturated by electronic imagery I use the traditional
materials of a quill pen and a bottle of ink to create large-scale images that
persist in exploring and claiming the sub-technological process of observation
and mark making. My subjects include the banality of mass produced domestic
artifacts; the politics of war; sexual identity and power; and the beauty disclosed
in the close scrutiny of natural and man made structures. This diversity of
subject matter is a critical element in my attempt to express the complexity
and variety of contemporary life. My goal as an artist is to be faithful to
my deepest imaginative impulses and the observations interpretations and critiques
of the world that these impulses generate."
More info: www.joanlinder.com
Liza McConnell
"Personal economy of the artist is the most relevant factor in determining the
form, content and duration of any artwork. It is a precarious, dynamic condition
and, essentially, not an issue of money, but of imagination. While my art process
has always been tethered to the above ideas, I’ve only just now presented my
work in these terms. I connect this piece to my previous work by asking… What
does a person do when invited to map their idiosyncratic particulars onto a
more general, but also idiosyncratic, external situation? Exquisite handmade
paper, the by-products of other peoples’ projects… and the miscellaneous materials
in my studio, the by-products of my own… Every endeavor is a compromise between
what I already have, and what I can imagine to be possible. When the endeavor
is art, I try to make that exchange palpable in the resulting object."
Mike Quinn
"I make work about preconceived notions of failure and success and how they relate to my need to escape the pains of everyday. I see limits in placing so much emphasis on winning and by contrast, a wealth of knowledge obtainable through loss. This piece is about celebrating the my losses, failures and lessons learned over the past three decades. I use over-the-counter drugs in my work as well as other every day drug store and package store items like vodka, coffee, sleeping pills, mylanta, tobacco, beer, diet coke, Benadryl, and Robotussin."
More info: www.perryrubenstein.com
Christopher Reiger
"I am chiefly concerned with contemporary constructions of nature and am most
interested in the relationship of modern man to his animal armature and brethren. My
recent works also respond to the anxiety and uncertainty endemic to our time
by returning to the traditional Sublime, picturing an ambivalent world that
delights and inspires as surely as it destroys and awes. The animals and the
hallucinatory landscapes depicted are specific—representations of a species
and place—to be sure, but are also metaphors for the human condition."
More info: www.christopherreiger.com
Text courtesy of the artists.