From “Meditations of the Emperor” (2013) © The Bruce High Quality Foundation
THE BRUCE HIGH QUALITY FOUNDATION TO PRESENT ‘MEDITATIONS,’ AN EXHIBITION OF NEW WORK IN TWO NEW YORK CITY SPACES
November 8th – December 16th, 2013 Opening Reception: Friday, November 8th, 6-8PM
Mark Fletcher, 24 Washington Square North : Vito Schnabel, 43 Clarkson Street
The Bruce High Quality Foundation (BHQF), whose installations, videos, paintings, sculptures, and performances simultaneously celebrate and critique art’s social history, will present Meditations, a single exhibition of new work in two Manhattan locations.
Meditations will be open to the public at the viewing spaces of Mark Fletcher and Vito Schnabel, art impresarios whose unconventional operations – each has a semi-private venue with irregular exhibition schedules, geographically independent from the city’s art gallery districts – echo the alternative nature of The Bruce High Quality Foundation’s practice.
The exhibition is described by BHQF as “a meditation on the historical relationship between works of art and the consolidation and dispersion of political power.” Through the sculptures, painting, and video on view in Meditations, the artists will use the visual language of antiquity to explore the ways objects have served as manifestations of power, and to investigate how preservation, historicizing, and collecting practices reveal and obscure other paths of influence and manipulation.
I. Meditations of the Emperor
At Mark Fletcher’s space at 24 Washington Square North, BHQF will present “Meditations of the Emperor,” a human-scale recreation of the Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius, the ancient Roman bronze statue dating to 175 C.E., known as the only fully preserved bronze statue of a pre-Christian Roman emperor. The original bronze, which depicts the philosopher king as a merciful conqueror, resides in Capitoline Museums of Rome. This ancient bronze is said to have served as the model for the Equestrian Statue of King George III of England that stood in New York City’s Bowling Green until 1776, when it was dismantled and converted into musket balls for use by George Washington’s army in battles of the American Revolutionary War.
At Mark Fletcher, the Foundation’s version of the Equestrian Statue will be rendered in high-density foam, plaster, burlap, gold leaf, two-channel video, and car speakers on a powder coated aluminum base. Televisions replace the heads of the emperor and his horse, broadcasting a video essay inspired by Marcus Aurelius “Meditations,” a collection of notes Aurelius wrote to himself, recapitulations of the Stoic philosophy by which he lived. The artists’ video is a montage combining hundreds of found video clips and quotations tracing a course between formal figurations of power through the ages, and a young woman’s monologue about her everyday confrontations with powers beyond her control. The sculpture and video will be accompanied by a large-scale painting depicting the ass of Aurelius’ horse. According to BHQF, “Meditations of the Emperor” explores “the desire of those in power to be simultaneously loved and feared, and the empathic fantasy of talking to animals.”
II. Selections from the Greek and Roman Collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
At Vito Schnabel’s space at 43 Clarkson Street, BHQF will present a group of 26 new sculptures from the its ongoing initiative to recreate, in homemade Playdough modeling clay, every object housed in the Greek and Roman antiquities collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Among the works on view at Clarkson Street will be 1:1 scale replicas of antiquities, some dating to the era of the original Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius. These new objects – each one will carry a paper replica of its corresponding Metropolitan Museum inventory tag – include portrait busts, vessels, shards, and a nearly full-scale lion that is a stand-in for the classical Greek “Marble Statue of a Lion,” a sculpture dating to ca. 400-390 BC.
The Foundation describes “Selections from the Greek and Roman Collection” as “a portrait of an institution.” They have written, “This is not about the birthplace of democracy or its mannered second act in Roman imperialism. It is about how we experience a public art collection in an era when the interests of continuous commercial consumption have ridden roughshod over our capacity for public memory.”
www.thebrucehighqualityfoundation.com/