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Still of SUSANA MENDES SILVA's Ritual, 2006

SUSANA MENDES SILVA Ritual, 2006 Color PAL video with sound 5'49"

Still of JESPER JUST A Vicious Undertow's, 2007

JESPER JUST A Vicious Undertow, 2007 Super 16mm on DVD 10:00 minutes

Image of NAN GOLDIN's Heart-shaped Bruise, NYC, 1980

NAN GOLDIN Heart-shaped Bruise, NYC, 1980 Cibachrome 30 X 40 inches

Still of KOTA EZAWA's Who's Afraid of Black, White and Grey, 2003

KOTA EZAWA Who's Afraid of Black, White and Grey, 2003 Single channel video with sound on DVD Dimensions variable

Still of KEREN CYTTER's Something Happened, 2007

KEREN CYTTER Something Happened, 2007 Color digital video Running time: 7:00

Still of CHENG RAN's Rock Dove, 2009

CHENG RAN Rock Dove, 2009 Single channel video 5 minutes

Image of SHIRIN NESHAT's Allegiance with Wakefulness, 1994

SHIRIN NESHAT Allegiance with Wakefulness, 1994 Black and white RC print and ink (photo taken by Cynthia Preston) 46 3/4 X 37 1/8 inches

Still of LI MING's XX, 2009

LI MING XX, 2009 Single channel video 5'17"

Image of DASH SNOW's TBT, 2008

DASH SNOW TBT, 2008 Digital chromogenic print 37 1/2 X 55 3/4 inches

Still of MAYA DEREN's Meshes of the Afternoon, 1943

MAYA DEREN Meshes of the Afternoon, 1943 DVD 18:00

Image of BARBARA BLOOM's Lolita, 1998

BARBARA BLOOM Lolita, 1998 Wool rug 96 X 60 inches

Detail of BARBARA BLOOM's Lolita, 1998

BARBARA BLOOM Lolita, 1998 Wool rug 96 X 60 inches

Image of HANNE DARBOVEN's 12 Months with Postcards from Today of Horses, 1982

HANNE DARBOVEN 12 Months with Postcards from Today of Horses, 1982 Postcards and mixed media 89 X 43 3/4 inches

Image of FELIX GONZALEZ-TORRES's Untitled (A Portrait), 1991/1995

FELIX GONZALEZ-TORRES Untitled (A Portrait), 1991/1995

Detail of HANNE DARBOVEN's 12 Months with Postcards from Today of Horses, 1982

HANNE DARBOVEN 12 Months with Postcards from Today of Horses, 1982 Postcards and mixed media 89 X 43 3/4 inches

Press Release

"TRUE! --nervous --very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you say that I am mad? The disease had sharpened my senses --not destroyed --not dulled them. Above all was the sense of hearing acutely. I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell. How, then, am I mad? Hearken! and observe how healthily --how calmly I can tell you the whole story." -Edgar Allan Poe, 1843 James Cohan Gallery is pleased to present The Tell-Tale Heart (Part 2), a group exhibition inspired by the classic story by American 19th century novelist and poet Edgar Allan Poe. The exhibition opens June 24th through August 13th, 2010 and will feature works by Barbara Bloom, Victor Burgin, Keren Cytter, Hanne Darboven, Maya Deren, Tracey Emin, James Ensor, Kota Ezawa, Nan Goldin, Jesper Just, Susana Mendes Silva, Li Ming, Cheng Ran, Dash Snow and Felix Gonzalez Torres. Much like the macabre drama of Poe's story, in which the protagonist's obsession with his upstairs neighbour drives him to murder, the works in this exhibition portray artists various modes of expression which explore dissolute scenarios through the lens of "obsession" that reflect an intensity of passion, guilt, rage, love, identity, death, and political beliefs. Maya Deren's seminal film, Meshes in the Afternoon (1943), serves as a cornerstone to the exhibition, embodying the dark impulses that drive human desire and imagination to their extremes. Andre Breton's novel about obsession titled Nadja inspired conceptual artist Victor Burgin to create Fiction/Film (1991), a photographic work in which a mysterious female figure haunts the Parisian landscape. Hanne Darboven's systemic numbering and time-based collage "12 Months with Postcards from Today of Horses" (1982) posits that if symbolic handwriting and image are mirrors to the mind, then the unconscious keeps its secrets.

In Felix Gonzalez Torres' video installation, Untitled (Portrait) (1971), two empty chairs sit facing a black television monitor that periodically displays lone statements that portend greed, solitude and unrequited love, examples of which include "a new supreme court ruling," "more failed banks," "long love letters," "a merciless cardinal," and "a patriotic mob". Gonzales presents a "picture" that is simultaneously personal and political while proposing that extreme actions can produce world shaking events. Dash Snow's black and white photograph titled TBT(2008) portrays a lone female lying face down on a bed in a darkened room; there is a sense of the possibility of violence or love lurking in the shadows. An older work on exhibit inspired by a short story by Poe titled "Hop Frog Hop-Frog; or, The Eight Chained Ourang-Outangs" is James Ensor's gritty revenge hand-colored print titled "Hop-Frog's Revenge" (1898) depicting the sadistic murder of the king and his cronies. The show will also include the US debut of Li Ming, an emerging conceptual artist based in China. This work was also included in The Tell-Tale Heart (Part 1) at the James Cohan Gallery Shanghai, curated by Leo Xu. In Ming's single-channel video work, XX (2009), two young men sit bound by overlapping t-shirts, struggling to separate themselves from one another. Other works by young video artists explore the darker side of personal relationships such as Jesper Just's work, A Vicious Undertow (2007), Keren Cytter's Something Happened (2007) and Kota Ezawa's animation Who's Afraid of Black, White and Gray, (2003). All three aforementioned works are presented as disjunctive narrative stories which expose the extreme emotion and vulnerability of complex love relationships. The Tell-Tale heart lives within us all. This exhibition is curated by Elyse Goldberg

For further information please contact Jane Cohan at jane@jamescohan.com or Peter Brandt pbrandt@jamescohan.com or by telephone 212-714-9500.

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