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installation view of several artworks
a television hanging from the corner of the room broadcasting the news channel
installation view of two artworks
installation view of two artworks
installation view of an artwork
installation view of an artwork
installation view of an artwork
installation view of an artwork
Video still of JON RAFMAN's Poor Magic, 2017

 

JON RAFMAN
Poor Magic (video still), 2017
Single-channel HD Video and unique sculptural installation 
Duration: 8:30 mins
Installation dimensions variable

 

 

Image of JON RAFMAN's Poor Magic, 2017

 

JON RAFMAN
Poor Magic, 2017
Single-channel HD Video and unique sculptural installation 
Duration: 8:30 mins
Installation dimensions variable

 

JCG9258.3

 

Image of DAVID ALTMEJD's The Green Room Flashback, 2017

 

DAVID ALTMEJD
The Green Room Flashback, 2017
Polyurethane foam, resin, steel, epoxy
clay, epoxy gel, acrylic paint, synthetic
hair, cast glass, glass paint, quartz,
thread, hardware, graphite, colored
pencil, glass eyes, bead, rhinestone
21 1/4 x 8 1/2 x 10 3/4 in.

 

JCG9264

Image of LEE MULLICAN's Sometimes I Think of War, c. 1945-46

 

LEE MULLICAN
Sometimes I Think of War, c. 1945-46
Ink on board
15 x 9 in. 
 

JCG9236

 

Image of LEE MULLICAN's Untitled, 1945

 

LEE MULLICAN
Untitled, 1945
Ink on board
8 7/8 x 11 1/8 in.

 

JCG9235

 

Image of LEE MULLICAN's Untitled, 1963

 

LEE MULLICAN
Untitled, 1963
Acrylic on paper
13 5/8 x 10 3/8 in. (each)

 

JCG9221


 

 

Image of MERNET LARSEN's The Philosophers, 1984

 

MERNET LARSEN
The Philosophers, 1984
Oil on paper
12 x 9 in. (each)

 

JCG8571

 

Image of MERNET LARSEN's Sunday Drive, 1986

 

MERNET LARSEN
Sunday Drive, 1986
Oil on canvas
30 x 48 in. 

 

JCG8171

 

Image of OMER FAST's CNN Concatenated, 2002

 

OMER FAST
CNN Concatenated, 2002
Single channel video
Color, sound (English)
Duration: 18 min. looped

 

JCG8871.2

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Behind Your Eyes, 1992

 

FRED TOMASELLI
Behind Your Eyes, 1992 
Pills, acrylic, and resin on wood panel
80 x 30 in.
 

JCG8314

Image of TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK's Forcicle, 1999

 

TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK
Forcicle, 1999
Mixed media on felt
107 x 117 in. 

 

JCG6529

 

Image of TABAIMO's Flow-wer 08, 2014

 

TABAIMO
Flow-wer 08, 2014
Ink, beeswax crayon, color pencil and pencil on Japanese paper
16 11/16 x 13 7/16 in.

 

JCG7280

Image of TABAIMO's Flow-wer 10, 2014

 

TABAIMO
Flow-wer 10, 2014
Ink, beeswax crayon, color pencil and pencil on Japanese paper
17 5/8 x 13 3/4 in. 

 

JCG7279

 

Press Release

Dream Machines -  - Exhibitions - James Cohan

LEE MULLICAN
Untitled
1963
Acrylic on paper
13 5/8 x 10 3/8 in. 

James Cohan is pleased to present the group exhibition Dream Machines. The exhibition considers the point at which the real and the imaginary cease to be perceived as contradictory. As discourses of reality/unreality become an increasingly dominant feature of our day to day lives, Dream Machines posits that artists can navigate across both collecting meaning along the way. The exhibition brings together artists from different generations and nationalities, using a diverse range of materials and processes including David Altmejd, Omer Fast, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Mernet Larsen, Lee Mullican, Jon Rafman, Tabaimo, and Fred Tomaselli. Dream Machines will be on view from Friday,June 23, through Friday, July 28.
 
Key to the exhibition are a selection of drawings produced by Lee Mullican in 1945-46 while he was still serving in the Army. Mullican’s time in the army landed him in Japan just after the bombs had dropped, the trauma of what he witnessed never left his work despite its sublimation into deeper and deeper abstraction and automatic processes. Like much of the work in the exhibition, these drawings are a physical actualization of Mullican’s broader intention to see more deeply into the body. 
Works by David Altmejd, Tabaimo, and Mernet Larsen manifest the volatility of the psyche through unnatural images of the human body. Altmejd has long probed the head as a site of uncanny potential because the head contains everything; the universe, consciousness, and thought itself. His works equally explore what lies within as what exists without, dissolving distinctions between exquisite beauty and horror.Tabaimo’s quasi plant/organ drawings, like her videos, probe an unsettling morphology intent on drawing out themes of isolation and contagion that lurk beneath the daily existence of contemporary Japan. Mernet Larsen’s The Philosophers, produced in 1984, began as an assignment for her students to depict the inner-workings of other people’s minds. The suite of paintings on paper reveal her interest in psychology and philosophy alongside a persistent willingness to probe less tangible aspects of our humanity. 
 
Fred Tomaselli and Trenton Doyle Hancock explore the body in altered states of being and seeing in paintings made from layers of imagery. Tomaselli’s anatomical portrait of a man, Behind Your Eyes (1992), is made from a cocktail of over-the-counter pills such as Tylenol, Advil, Tums, and placebos which are set in paint and resin on wood and presents the body as both a depository of the chemicals it consumes and a visualization of their chemical effect. Hancock’s work Forcicle (1999) made of collaged felt depicts the dream state of a “Mound”, the central and highly stylized character of his constructed universe. By accessing a deep space within his own narrative, Hancock untethers himself from the constraints of our own world and compounds the seductions of unreality. 
 
Works by Jon Rafman and Omer Fast weave fiction within political and social realities. Rafman’s video installation Poor Magic, presented in self-contained solo viewing environment, is a mixture of body horror and existential probing, inhabiting a technological nightmare that examines the darker side of the human experience through fantastic digital reconstructions. Fast interests himself in the telling and retelling of stories. His work CNN Concatenated (2002) is composed entirely of excerpts from CNN news anchors. The extracts are edited so that each presenter speaks only a single word, but collectively their words form seven short monologues, suggesting emotive personal appeals rather than conventional news broadcasts. The viewer is left with the impression that these soliloquies are the “real” broadcast, reaching out to us through a porous meeting of worlds and readily apparent if only we listened closely enough.
 
Please conatct Jeffrey Waldron at jwaldron@jamescohan.com or 212.714.9500 with press inquiries.
 
For further inquiries regarding the exhibtion, please contact David Norr at dnorr@jamescohan.com or 212.714.9500.
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