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Contemporary Art Review

Concrete Island at Venus Over LA

March 30, 2017

Jason Matthew Lee, bruteforcephreak series (2017). Mixed media on cut and welded pay-phones. Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Jason Matthew Lee, bruteforcephreak series (2017). Mixed media on cut and welded pay-phones. Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Pentti Monkkonen, Cell Towers (2017). Wood, anodized aluminum, electrical components, flourescent lights, steel, paint, dimensions variable. Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Pentti Monkkonen, Cell Towers (2017). Wood, anodized aluminum, electrical components, flourescent lights, steel, paint, dimensions variable. Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Kelly Akashi, ways of being (figure) (2016). Brick, lead, wax and wick, 26 x 6 x 42 inches. Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Kelly Akashi, ways of being (figure) (2016). Brick, lead, wax and wick, 26 x 6 x 42 inches. Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Concrete Island (Installation view). Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Concrete Island (Installation view). Image courtesy of VENUS LA. Photo: Lazaros.

Concrete Island at Venus Over LA

By Pablo Lopez

Assembling a spectrum of work spanning six decades, Concrete Island is most fluent when it addresses contemporary vulnerabilities and concerns. Full of unease and maudlin sexuality, Kaari Upson’s Shadow Work (2009) is a stellar 20 minute digital video that addresses the psychic contradictions of American life. Similarly, the raw qualities of Lazaros’ Shelter (2011), an appropriated NGO-distributed post-disaster tarpaulin, negotiate the line between social awareness and didacticism.

Sharp contrasts across works give evidence to the range of sophistication in this exhibition. Alternatively, certain works, like Kim Gordon’s Not yet titled (glitter stick) and Not yet titled (both 2017), present few challenges to a viewer, and Kelly Akashi’s histrionic altar, Ways of being (figure) 2016, diverges aesthetically from the show’s attention to formal rigor.

Conversely, several emergent artists stand up better alongside their established counterparts. Daniel R. Small offers a keen and foreboding vision of civilization and technology with his petrified sculptures (A Petrified Past series, 2017). And Jason Matthew Lee’s mixed-media and welded payphones are an anarchic and astute appeal to the pedestrian past as the technological drumbeat rolls on.

As the current political discourse grows increasingly toxic, the future can only be imagined with a modulated sense of anxiety. It’s no surprise then that an exhibition with pre-apocalyptic undertones might be thematized as an island unto itself. Concrete Island is a timely show with attention to social tumult and misgivings about the future, although its overall impact is diminished by its broad curatorial approach.

 

Concrete Island runs March 11–May 20, 2017 at VENUSOver Los Angeles (601 S Anderson Street, Los Angeles, CA 90023)

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