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DREAM LIFE

Past exhibition
21 May - 2 July 2022
  • ABOUT
  • Selected Works
  • RELATED CONTENT
  • Installation view, Dream Life, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view, Dream Life, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Raffi Kalenderian. Emila, 2021 (left) and Dava, 2021 (right) (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Tyson Reeder. Installation view, Dream Life, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view. Dream Life, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Alex Dodge. P.U.F. (Personal Universal Friend) Welcome Home!, 2020 (left) and Miko Veldkamp. Passenger Ghost, 2022 (right). (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installation view, Dream Life, BB&M, Seoul, 2022.
  • ABOUT


  • DREAM LIFE  | CURATED BY DAN CAMERON

    MAY 21 - JULY 2, 2022

     

     

    ESTEBAN CABEZA DE BACA

    ALEX DODGE

    RAFFI KALENDERIAN

    TYSON REEDER

    MIKO VELDKAMP

     

     

    PRESS RELEASE →
    Organized by the renowned curator and critic Dan Cameron, Dream Life brings together five artists who, each in his own distinctive way, are devising new modes of representation in American painting today. Highly regarded among the artistic community, their works are exhibited and collected by prominent institutions, including MoMA, LACMA, the Whitney, and the Metropolitan Museum. Still, little of this art has been given much exposure in Korea. This show provides a snapshot of the artistic energies being generated, particularly in figurative painting, in the creative hubs of America today.

    In their 30s and 40s, and based in New York, Los Angeles, and Chicago, these artists’ practices reflect a shared generational interest in image-making as influenced by the cross-pollination of cultures and the ascendance of new media. “Grounded in representation without actually being fully committed to its principles,” as Cameron notes, their work engages with enduring issues of form, color, texture, and gesture in painting, in order to reinvent this traditional genre in diverse, contemporary ways.
    Read more
    Of Hispanic and Native American heritage, Esteban Cabeza de Baca employs a range of painterly techniques, entwining layers of graffiti, landscape elements, and pre-Columbian pictographs in works that deconstruct and expand upon the language of European landscape painting and abstraction. His references range from petroglyphs, from which many of his motifs derive, to Jackson Pollock, whose drip technique, the artist notes, was in turn influenced by Navajo sand painting. 

    A different kind of riff on ancient traditions is seen in the work of Alex Dodge, who divides his time between New York and Tokyo. Combining advanced digital tools with traditional techniques—particularly those shaped by his time in Japan, such as ukiyo-e block printing and katazome stenciling process—he produces colorful and tactile scenes featuring figures that hover between the digital and the analogue, between the real and the imagined. 

    The figures in Raffi Kalenderian’s work, portraits of his friends and fellow artists, also seem to occupy an ambiguous realm between the real and the fanciful, embedded as they are in vibrant, textured, and colorfully patterned surroundings that appear as projections of their inner lives, a blending of their psyche and the external world. Though distinctly contemporary moments caught in time, these paintings also echo a range of historical modes from Vuillard to Hockney. 

    A similar vibe of low-key surreality pervades the canvases of Tyson Reeder, whose strangely deserted landscapes of palm trees, beaches, and winding freeways, rendered almost casually in a washed-out Fauvist palette, evokes the abiding mythos of American slacker subculture. Often featuring long-haired riders on motorcycles, these scenes—miles away from the documentarian appropriation of, say, Richard Prince’s Girlfriend—exist in some hazy, atemporal, and thus timeless, dimension.
     
    The sense of displacement from concrete time and place also infuses the work of Miko Veldkamp, a transplanted New Yorker who was born in Suriname and grew up in the Netherlands. Resonant with a feeling of diasporic otherness, his paintings are populated by figures who are shape-shifting variations of himself, rendered in fantastical scenes in dreamy, translucent layers that elide moments of remembered and imagined experiences. 

    Divergent in their subjects, techniques, and intellectual affinities, the works in Dream Life convey a richly varied experience of the contemporary world, “whether seen through an imagined lens of pixilation,” as Cameron observes, “or all-encompassing backdrops, as subjects glimpsed in smudgy anonymity or captured in portrait form, or in the form of landscape serving as the vehicle for a feast of sensory pleasures.”
  • SELECTED WORKS


  • Alex Dodge  Nigel, After the Humans (persimmon), 2022  Oil and acrylic on polyester over panel  121.92 x 91.44 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Alex Dodge  Catastrophic System Failure (desert sky), 2022  Oil and acrylic on polyester over panel  121.92 x 182.88 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Esteban Cabeza de Baca  Three Rivers, 2019  Oil on linen  152.4 x 152.4 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Esteban Cabeza de Baca  Secret Desert, 2020  Acrylic on Panel  36.2 x 30.5 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Raffi Kalenderian  Emilia, 2021  Oil on canvas  122.6 x 91.4 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Raffi Kalenderian  Dave, 2021  Oil on canvas  121.9 x 91.4 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Tyson Reeder  Mango, 2022  Acrylic and graphite on canvas  81.3 x 111.8 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Tyson Reeder  Grape, 2022  Acrylic and graphite on canvas  81.3 x 111.8 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Miko Veldkamp  Passenger Ghost, 2022  Oil and acrylic on canvas  76.2 x 101.6 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Miko Veldkamp  Bather, 2022  Oil and acrylic on canvas  152.4 x 121.9 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Alex Dodge, Nigel, After the Humans (persimmon), 2022.
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