EVERY REVOLUTION IS A ROLL
OF THE DICE
Organized by Bob Nickas 22 September 2007 - 3 February 2008 Image
by Guyton\Walker, 2007Opening Reception Live performance by New Humans Saturday 22 September 2007, 6-9pm Gallery Walkthrough With the artists and curator Saturday 22 September, 2-3pm Special Evening for Ballroom Members With DJs Little Danny + Bob Nickas Friday 21 September, 10pm Liberty Hall Artists: Barry X Ball . Huma Bhabha . Carol Bove . Trisha Donnelly . Gardar Eide Einarsson . Jason Fox . Wayne Gonzales . Robert Grosvenor . Guyton\Walker . Adam Helms . Corey McCorkle . Wangechi Mutu . John Miller . Haim Steinbach . Mika Tajima . Joan Wallace Every Revolution is a Roll of the Dice is an exhibition of sculptural objects that, by way of their presentation, can be seen as actors on a stage. The floor of the main gallery will be covered with a thin layer of black volcanic sand and the floor of the second gallery will be covered with white sand. All free-standing objects will be placed in the sand. Viewers will walk around the perimeter of a desert/desert island. The objects may appear to them as stranded, as castaways. This staging calls to mind the poignancy and absurdity of a Samuel Beckett play. The gallery becomes a landscape in which various objects, particularly figurative objects, are isolated in small groupings to create a heightened sense of interaction between them. A marble head by Barry X Ball and an unfired clay head by Huma Bhabha, for example, may seem to be looking together at Joan Wallace’s “Pool Ladder Painting 2” – a large table-top work that has a trap door through which an aluminum pool ladder has been placed. Each piece activates the other. The trap door in the table top can be seen as referring to the trap doors of a stage and a gallows. The works by Barry X Ball and Huma Bhabha both represent a scarred or wounded head: the exposed chicken wire in Huma Bhabha’s work is skeletal, as if part of the head has been blown away; the cracks and fissures in the stone in Barry X Ball’s work can be read as scars or head wounds. This is just one example of how in this exhibition the poetical/political readings of various works can be brought to the fore, and how by way of a theatrical staging they will activate each other and the space in which they are seen. The title of the show is taken from the title of a short film made by Jean-Marie Straub and Danièle Huillet in 1978. The text of the film is based entirely on the Stephane Mallarmé poem, “A Roll of the Dice Will Never Abolish Chance,” published in 1897, the year before his death. The film, shot in Père Lachaise cemetery in Paris, near the graves of the Communards of 1871, is structurally built around the textual and graphic elements of the poem. The works in this show, many of which were made expressly for this exhibition, are meant to be read as symbolic objects, conveying through association and interaction a sense of a troubled but not hopeless world. This is, after all, a world in which artists continue to give form to the bigger questions — to life and death — and to create objects that are as beautiful as they are poignant. The thirteen artists and two artists’ collaboratives in Every Revolution is a Roll of the Dice all live and work in New York city, having moved there from diverse locations in the United States, Europe, Scandinavia, the Middle East, Africa and Asia: Barry X Ball (Pasadena, CA); Huma Bhabha (Karachi, Pakistan); Carol Bove (Geneva, Switzerland); Trisha Donnelly (San Francisco, CA); Gardar Eide Einarsson (Oslo, Norway); Jason Fox (Yonkers, NY); Wayne Gonzales (New Orleans, LA); Robert Grosvenor (New York, NY); Guyton\Walker (Hammond, IN\Columbus, GA); Adam Helms (Tucson, AZ); Corey McCorkle (La Crosse, WI); Wangechi Mutu (Nairobi, Kenya); John Miller (Cleveland, OH); Haim Steinbach (Rehovot, Israel); Mika Tajima/New Humans (Los Angeles, CA); and Joan Wallace (New York). Mika Tajima and her band, New Humans, will perform in Ballroom Marfa’s outdoor courtyard on opening night, with band and instruments on a white sand stage. Every Revolution Is A Roll of the Dice is organized by Bob Nickas, a New York based critic and freelance curator who has realized an extraordinary number of exhibitions for galleries and museums in the United States and Europe since the mid 1980s. He was curatorial advisor at P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York between 2004 and 2007, and his writing has appeared in numerous publications including Artforum, Afterall and Index. He has authored several books - Theft Is Vision (forthcoming, 2007), Collection Diary (2005), and Live Free or Die: Collected Writings 1985-1999 (2000) are three examples - and has contributed to many catalogues and monographs on artists, among them Gert and Uwe Tobias, Jules de Balincourt, Peter Hujar, Yayoi Kusama, Louise Lawler, Felix Gonzalez-Torres and Cady Noland. Every Revolution is a Roll of the Dice has been generously supported by Ballroom Members, The Brown Foundation, Inc., Houston, Foundation for Contemporary Arts, New York, Marfa Chamber of Commerce, Marfa and Texas Commission on the Arts. ![]() BRUCE LEVINGSTON Thursday 4 October 2007 SONIC YOUTH Saturday 6 October 2007 BORIS Thursday 18 October 2007 FILM TEXT PERFORMANCE FILM, Curator Ralph McKay Bruce McClure Michaela Grill & Giuseppe Ielasi Luis Recoder & Sandra Gibson Friday 14 December - Saturday 15 December 2007 Listen! ![]() Tune-in 24/7 to BALLROOM Marfa’s newly updated Jukebox and hear tracks from BALLROOM Marfa’s favorite guests of the last few years, plus some others we’ve thrown in for good measure! Click here for previous events.... Ballroom Marfa is a dynamic, contemporary cultural arts space that provides a lively intellectual environment where varied perspectives and issues are explored through visual arts, film, music and performance. As an advocate for the freedom of artistic expression, Ballroom Marfa's mission is to serve international, national, regional and local arts communities and support the work of both emerging and recognized artists working in all media. Ballroom Marfa is particularly interested in helping artists and curators achieve projects that have significant cultural impact but would be impossible to realize in a traditional gallery or museum setting. Ballroom Marfa is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) www.ballroommarfa.org |
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