Joianne Bittle: On My Way Gone

September 06, 2012 - October 13, 2012

Joianne Bittle: On My Way Gone

September 06, 2012 - October 13, 2012

  • Moonman V, 2011-2012
    oil on canvas (3 panels)
    120 x 84 inches

  • On My Way Gone, 2012
    HD video 9 min 5 sec

  • Unconformity, 2012
    oil on canvas, dry pigment, plaster, charcoal, glass, beeswax, mirrors, and fluorescent lights
    114 x 60 x 54 inches

  • Knowing Man, 2011 book page
    10 x 8 inches

  • Segments Frieze, 2012 (detail)
    oil and charcoal on canvas, in twenty-two parts
    24 x 360 inches

  • Segments Frieze, 2012 (detail 2)
    oil and charcoal on canvas, in twenty-two parts
    24 x 360 inches

  • Segments Frieze, 2012 (detail 3)
    oil and charcoal on canvas, in twenty-two parts
    24 x 360 inches

  • There But For the Grace of You Go I, 2012
    oil on canvas, in two parts
    48 x 48 inches

  • Space Monkey, 2012
    oil and charcoal on panel, in four parts
    44 x 12 inches

  • Brachiopod, 2010
    pencil on paper
    13 1/2 x 10 inches

  • Hallucigenia, 2012
    pencil on paper
    10 x 13 1/2 inches

  • installation view (from left to right): Segments Frieze, 2012, Moonman V, 2011-2012 and Unconformity, 2012

  • installation view (from left to right): There But For the Grace of You Go I, 2012, Knowing Man, 2011 and Segments Frieze, 2012

  • installation view: Segments Frieze, 2012

  • installation view: Moonman V, 2011-2012

  • installation view (from left to right):Space Monkey, 2012, Hallucigenia, 2012, Brachiopod, 2010, and On My Way Gone, 2012

(PDF)

Churner and Churner is pleased to present “On My Way Gone,” an exhibition of new work by Joianne Bittle. With an installation, over twenty-five paintings, and the artist’s first film, the exhibition is Bittle’s largest and most ambitious to date. This is her second show with the gallery.

“On My Way Gone” is anchored by two works: Unconformity (2012), a large-scale diorama of an iridescent cave, and the ten-foot painting Moonman V (2011-2012). The two works span prehistoric geological formations and space age exploration, setting these two seemingly disparate worlds in stark synchronicity.

Constructed in the gallery’s front window, Unconformity presents a version of Plato’s cave, and the philosopher’s allegory of painting is a conceptual touchstone for the show overall. Using the techniques of traditional diorama construction, honed through her practice as a professional dioramist for the American Museum of Natural History, Bittle creates a layered scene of light-dappled stalagmites and stalactites. Unlike the closed-off worlds of the natural history museum, however, Bittle’s Unconformity is not based in geological history; rather, it is formed with the poetic sensibility that tethers the works in this show to Bittle’s preservationist practice. The diorama’s painted-plaster rock formations, glass platform, fluorescent lights and mirrors create an illusion of depth while allowing the viewer to see himself, quite literally, inside the cave.

Segments (also 2012) is a series of twenty-two continuous panels that further derail the traditional mode of diorama painting, presenting a vibrant panorama that includes floral and molluscular details that could be primeval or contemporary. The panel painting leads the viewer to the back room of the gallery, where Moonman V threatens to escape its site as the top of painting extends through the gallery’s ceiling. This ten-foot painting, the culmination of over a year’s work by Bittle, is the latest in a series depicting close-cropped images of astronauts, their faces obscured by reflective helmets. One imagines these moonmen intrepidly stepping out onto the surface of the earth’s satellite or some other alien environment.

In the same room is the artist’s first filmic project, an HD video titled On My Way Gone (2012). The video is a meditative tour filmed while floating down a mangrove swamp in a no-wake boat. The reflection in the water mirrors the mangrove trees and sky overhead, creating the illusion that the camera is floating weightless through the air. Positioned across from Moonman V, the image of the swamp becomes that which we see reflected in the astronaut’s helmet. It strikes another consonance between nature’s beauty and the outer limits of technology, treating both as specimens of the wonder of exploration, whether of the deepest lagoon or the outer reaches of our atmosphere.

An artist’s book accompanies the exhibition.

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Joianne Bittle has had solo exhibitions at Churner and Churner, New York; Eugene Binder Gallery, in Marfa, Texas; and Wave Hill, Bronx. She will be included in the upcoming exhibition “Art by Telephone . . . Recalled” in Fall 2012, which will take place at CNAEI, Chatou, France; CAPC, Bordeaux, France; the Emily Harvey Foundation, New York; Barnard College, New York; the San Francisco Art Institute, and the Chicago Art Institute. Bittle has participated recently in several group shows, including “Tableaux Parisiens” at The Do Right Hall, Marfa, Texas (2011); “A Live Animal,” at Root Division, San Francisco (2011); “Entomologia” at the Observatory Room, Brooklyn (2010); “Rubber Sheets” at C.R.E.A.M Projects, Brooklyn (2009); “Bioluminescence” at Akus Gallery in Willimantic, Connecticut (2009); and “Viridis II” at the Hewitt Gallery of Art, Marymount College, New York (2009). In 1998, she earned a BFA at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana, and was awarded an assistantship at the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica in Venice, Italy. Her work has been reviewed in Artforum and New York magazine, among other publications.

 

For more information, contact Renee Bovenzi at 212.675.2750 or renee@churnerandchurner.com.