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mask resembling that of Japanese culture

RAMMELLZEE Duchess, 1994 mixed media 20 X 13 X 10 inches

masked woman holding up a gun

Yinka Shonibare, MBE Un Ballo in Maschera (A Masked Ball) (video still), 2004 high definition digital video 32 minute loop, edition of 6 + 2 APs

close up of a red human face

CINDY SHERMAN Untitled, 1996 cibachrome photograph 57 7/8 X 38 inches edition of 6

old Italian carnival mask

Italian Carnival Mask 19th Century 11 ¾ X 7 X 4 ½ inches courtesy Joseph Gerena, NY

figure covered in leaves

Phyllis Galembo Minor Ekpe Masquerade with Mango Leaves Calabar South, Nigeria, 2005 ifochrome, 30 x 30 inches courtesy the artist

metal mask

European Brank or Scold's Bridle Western Europe (France, Germany or Spain) ca. 17th Century iron 8 X 6 3/8 X 6 1/2 inches courtesy Joseph Gerena, NY

black and white photographs of masked faces

Jurgen Klauke Antlitze (detail), 1972/2000 96 pieces, overall 400 x 720 cm (158 x 283.5 in) edition of 3 courtesy Galerie Hans Meyer, Düsseldorf.

round Indigenous mask

Jaguar/Man Mask Equador La Tolita Culture c.700 BCE-300 CE Diameter 7 ½ inches courtesy Joseph Gerena, NY

photograph of person with weird contraption around their nose

Richard Tuttle One Voice in Four Parts, 1999 color Xerox on vellum, letterpress on paper 12 X 8 ½ inches courtesy James Cohan Gallery, NY

mask made of different materials

Dick Evans Party Mask, 2001 mixed media 14 x 11 x 7 inches courtesy Maureen Paley, London

Japanese mask

Menpo Japan Edo Period, c 17th-18th Century 6 X 7 X 7 ½ inches courtesy Joseph Gerena, NY

elongated mask with a bird shape on the top

Bamiléké Elephant Mask Cameroon, Early 20th Century 15 X 17 X 11 ½ inches courtesy Joseph Gerena, NY

person using their own hair as a mask

Ingrid Mwangi and Robert Hutter Masked, 2000 video dimensions variable edition 4/5 © ingridmwangiroberthutter, 2000

Press Release

"The drama proceeds to metamorphoses, demon into priest into seductress into ape into queen into hog, as though we are in some Nietzschean world where behind every mask there are only more masks…What resolution could be possible?"

– Alphonso Lingis in Excesses: Eros and Culture, 1983

James Cohan Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibitions exhibition that explores the many forms and uses of masks throughout history and the influence they lend to contemporary artists. MASK will be comprised of a collection of over 40 masks assembled by Joseph G. Gerena Fine Art, dating from 700 BCE through the 20th century and representative of all continents and many cultural traditions. These masks will be shown alongside works by over 30 contemporary artists, including several specifically commissioned for the exhibition.

Masks conceal, protect and disguise. They give us the courage to speak freely, help us transcend physical limitations, add mystery and power to our rituals, amplify or hide our emotions, frighten, entertain, intimidate, humiliate, and even protect us from noxious gases and flying balls. The simplest covering can have a profound effect on both the wearer and viewer, simultaneously concealing and revealing. As Oscar Wilde summarized, "Give a man a mask and he'll tell you the truth."

The tradition of masks and masking offers limitless exploration; several contemporary artists have turned to the form to investigate issues of identity, power and provocation at a time when the bounds between real and assumed identities are becoming more indistinct. As political theorist Yaron Ezrahi has expressed, speaking of exhibitions world conflicts, "(Ski) masks are the uniform of the new armies of the 21st century and the new kind of violence, which no longer distinguishes between war against the stranger and war against the members of your own society. Just as this new war doesn't have a front, it doesn't have a face. It doesn't have boundaries."

Newly commissioned works include pieces by Olaf Breuning, Folkert de Jong, Yun-Fei Ji, Tony Oursler, Alison Elizabeth Taylor and William Villalongo. Other contemporary artists included are: Acconci Studio, Matthew Barney, Miriam Berkley, Jonathan Borofsky, Ulla von Brandenburg, Matthew Buckingham/Joachim Koester, Nick Cave, Willie Cole, Dick Evans, Phyllis Galembo, Caron Geary, Hans Haacke, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Jürgen Klauke, N'dilo Mutima, IngridMwangiRobertHutter, Bill Owens, RAMMELLZEE, Markus Schinwald, Andres Serrano, Cindy Sherman, Yinka Shonibare, MBE, Jeff Sonhouse, Reena Spaulilngs, Vibeke Tandberg, Rosemarie Trockel, Richard Tuttle and Gillian Wearing.

We are grateful to Joseph Gerena, whose wide-ranging collection so beautifully traces the historical root system of masks and masking. This exhibition was curated by Elyse Goldberg and Ginger Cofield and comes accompanied by a brochure with essays by Eleanor Heartney and Joseph Gerena.

For further information please contact Jane Cohan at jane@jamescohan.com or 212-714-9500.

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