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Detail of  FRED TOMASELLI's Geology Lesson

 

FRED TOMASELLI
Geology Lesson (detail)

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Geology Lesson, 1986

FRED TOMASELLI
Geology Lesson, 1986  
Mixed media installation with electronics and kitty litter
dimensions variable

 

ZNI0032

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Comforter, 1990

FRED TOMASELLI
Comforter, 1990  
Nylon sleeping bag, matchbook covers, thread
72 x 30 x 4 in
182.9 x 76.2 x 10.2 cm


ZNI0063
 

 

Detail of FRED TOMASELLI's Comforter, 1990

 

FRED TOMASELLI
Comforter, 1990  (detail)
Nylon sleeping bag, matchbook covers, thread
72 x 30 x 4 in

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Diary, 1990

FRED TOMASELLI
Diary, 1990  
Clock, planisphere, wood, prismacolor, enamel, press type
24 x 24 x 4 in.
61.0 x 61.0 x 10.2 cm


ZNI0033
 

Detail of FRED TOMASELLI's Diary

 

FRED TOMASELLI
Diary (detail)

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's The Sweet Aroma of Revolution, 1988

FRED TOMASELLI
The Sweet Aroma of Revolution, 1988
Acrylic and resin on wood
48 x 24 x 10 in.
121.9 x 61.0 x 25.4 cm


ZNI0064
 

Man in a gas mask attached to an artwork

FRED TOMASELLI
The Sweet Aroma of Revolution, 1988
Acrylic and resin on wood
48 x 24 x 10 in.

121.9 x 61.0 x 25.4 cm


ZNI0064
 

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Current Theory, 1984

FRED TOMASELLI
Current Theory, 1984  
Styrofoam cups, thread, blue tarp, electric fans, clamp light, chairs
172 x 117 1/2 in. (approx.)

436.9 x 298.4 cm (approx.)

 

ZNI0066

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Big Bang, 1990

FRED TOMASELLI
Big Bang, 1990
Hollow core doors, through door peepholes, 35mm chromes, door hardware
Dimensions variable

 

JCG8291

 

Detail of FRED TOMASELLI's Big Bang

FRED TOMASELLI
Big Bang (detail)

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Big As Me, 1991

FRED TOMASELLI
Big As Me, 1991
Acrylic, pills and resin on wood panel
72 x 22 1/4 inches

182.9 x 56.5 cm

 

JCG8299

 

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Box For Your Head, 1991-1997

FRED TOMASELLI
Box For Your Head, 1991-1997  
Leaves, acrylic, fabric, fluorescent light tubes, resin on wood
29 x 25 3/4 x 20 in

73.66 x 65.41 x 50.8 cm


JCG3120
 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Black and White All Over, 1993

FRED TOMASELLI
Black and White All Over, 1993  
Mixed media, acrylic and resin on wood panel
48 x 48 in.
121.9 x 121.9 cm


JCG4138

Interior of FRED TOMASELLI's  Box For Your Head

 

FRED TOMASELLI

Box For Your Head (interior)

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Naked From the Inside, 1992-2009

FRED TOMASELLI
Naked From the Inside, 1992-2009  
Pills, acrylic, and resin on wood panel
96 x 48 in.
243.84 x 121.92 cm


JCG4397
 

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's X Will Fade, 1990

FRED TOMASELLI
X Will Fade, 1990
Hemp leaves, acrylic and resin on wood panel
32 x 24 inches
81.28 x 60.96 cm


JCG5331
 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Kaboom, 1993

FRED TOMASELLI
Kaboom, 1993  
Hemp, acrylic, and resin on panel
48 x 48 in
121.9 x 121.9 cm


JCG8297
 

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Respirator 1, 1990

FRED TOMASELLI
Respirator 1, 1990
Pills, cake pan, acrylic, resin, lamp parts, air pump, water, tubing
Dimensions variable

 

JCG8292

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Respirator 1, 1990

FRED TOMASELLI
Respirator 1, 1990
Pills, cake pan, acrylic, resin, lamp parts, air pump, water, tubing
Dimensions variable

 

JCG8292

 

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Respirator 2, 1990

FRED TOMASELLI
Respirator 2, 1990
Pills, cake pan, acrylic, resin, lamp parts, air pump, water, tubing
Dimensions variable

 

JCG8296

Image of FRED TOMASELLI's Cubic Sky, 1988

FRED TOMASELLI
Cubic Sky, 1988  
Plexiglas, enamel paint, fluorescent lights, wood, hardware
dimensions variable

 

ZNI0065

 

Press Release

Fred Tomaselli - Early Work or How I Became A Painter - Exhibitions - James Cohan

FRED TOMASELLI, Box for Your Head, 1991-97

Fred Tomaselli
Early Work or
How I Became a Painter

 
OPENING RECEPTION FRIDAY, FEB 5, 2016, 6 – 8 PM
BOOK SIGNING SATURDAY, MAR 12, 2:30 PM
 
James Cohan is pleased to announce an exhibition by Fred Tomaselli entitled Early Work or How I Became a Painter, the artist’s fifth solo presentation at the gallery, opening at our Chelsea location on Friday, February 5 from 6 – 8 PM, and remaining on view through Saturday, March 19, 2016. The exhibition features two immersive and four interactive artworks made between 1984 and 1990 and a group of mixed-media paintings and works on paper from the 1990s.   Many of these works have not been shown in New York since the 1990s, and in some cases, not since the 1980s.
 
According to Tomaselli, something unexpected happened soon after graduating from Cal State Fullerton with a degree in painting and drawing: he had a crisis of faith. Racked with doubt about the relevance of the medium and troubled by its commodity status, he decided to quit painting altogether. After moving to downtown Los Angeles in 1982, Tomaselli began creating performative installations, a direction he continued after moving to Brooklyn in 1985. These immersive environments, made of low-cost, commercially available products, were created to deliver an escapist experience to the viewer while simultaneously commenting on the mechanics of that experience.
The earliest installation included in this exhibition is Current Theory (1984). Tomaselli describes building “an ocean of Styrofoam cups, with each cup tethered to the floor by a foot-long piece of thread.  I aimed electric fans at the cups, which blew back and forth in small, pendulous arcs...It was one of my first forays in the idea of art as immersive reality.”  An acknowledged influence of the California Light and Space movement is evident in this homespun work, as well as in other works on view such as Geology Lesson (1986), a viewer-activated contraption comprised of a grid of speakers, kitty litter, and a San Pedro cactus; and Cubic Sky (1988), an installation of suspended cubes depicting the night sky, which Tomaselli describes as a “winking attempt to containerize the universe.”
 
Despite having left painting behind in the previous decade, the processes of assemblage and accumulation in his installations eventually brought Tomaselli back to his two-dimensional roots. By 1990, he had built the foundation for the resin-based works for which he is most well-known, using pharmaceuticals and hemp leaves to form the underlying abstract compositions. This exhibition traces the development of Tomaselli's earliest attempts at shifting levels of consciousness first with installation works - which are experienced with the whole body - followed by the two-dimensional resin works - which are experienced visually. The embedded drugs no longer reach the brain through the bloodstream and must take a different route to altering perception. Instead, they travel to the brain through the eyes.
 
An earlier version of this exhibition was organized by Mike McGee at the Nicholas and Lee Begovich Gallery at California State University, Fullerton from September 12 - December 12, 2015, and was accompanied by a book, Early Work or How I Became A Painter, published by the California State University, Fullerton, Grand Central Press, with a foreword and essay by Mike McGee, and essays by art critic Gregory Volk and Bill Arning, director of the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston.  The publication is available for sale at the gallery.
 
Fred Tomaselli (born 1956, Santa Monica, CA) has been included in international biennial exhibitions including the Biennale of Sydney (2010); Prospect 1 New Orleans (2008); Site Santa Fe (2004); Whitney Biennial (2004) and others. Solo exhibitions include the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth (2014); a survey exhibition at Aspen Art Museum (2009) that toured to the Tang and Brooklyn Museums (2010); The Fruitmarket Gallery, Edinburgh (2004) toured to four venues in Europe and the US; Albright-Knox Gallery of Art (2003); Site Santa Fe (2001); Palm Beach ICA (2001), and Whitney Museum of American Art (1999).  Tomaselli’s work can be found in the public collections of institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art; the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Brooklyn Museum; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, (all New York); the Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo; and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
 
For press inquiries please contact Jeffrey Waldron at jwaldron@jamescohan.com or 212-714-9500.
 
For other information about the artist, please contact Jessica Lin Cox at jcox@jamescohan.com or 212-714-9500.
 

 

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