JACKIE WINSOR, LINNEA KNIAZ

Visual Arts

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

JACKIE WINSOR, LINNEA KNIAZ

529 W 21st Street
January 11–February 10, 2018
Opening Reception: Thursday, January 11, 6–8pm

NEW YORK – Paula Cooper Gallery is pleased to present Jackie Winsor, Linnea Kniaz opening January 11 at 529 West 21st Street. This is the second in a series of two-person presentations at Paula Cooper Gallery’s 529 West 21st Street space curated by Laura Hunt, the gallery’s archivist. There will be an opening reception on Thursday, January 11 from 6 to 8pm.

In 1979, the Museum of Modern Art presented a mid-career retrospective of Jackie Winsor’s work, the first retrospective show of a woman artist in MoMA’s department of Painting and Sculpture since 1946. This type of pioneering accomplishment punctuates Winsor’s 50-year career. Included in that 1979 MoMA show and exhibited here again, Winsor’s early work Solid Lattice (1970) encapsulates Winsor’s ability to imbue raw materials such as wood, rope, and nails with willpower and elegance. Lucy Lippard has noted: “Winsor often refers to ‘muscle’ when she talks about her work, not just the muscle it takes to make the pieces and haul them around, but the muscle which is the kinesthetic property of wound and bound forms, of the energy it takes to make a piece so simple and still so full of an almost frightening presence.”1

Winsor created Solid Lattice by nailing narrow wooden slats together in a vertically oriented compact spiral, working outward from a dense core. The piece is compressed physically and energetically, occupying its encircled space with both force and restraint. This amassing of the layers of wood ironically causes the sculpture to lift slightly from the floor, giving it an illusion of hovering at its bottom edge. It is precisely this forthrightness and blunt intention that buoys the work into its own mysterious zone.

Linnea Kniaz is somehow both effusive and reserved. This paradox materializes in her work: a generous output is often buttressed by analytical observations of that output, such that the bulk of her work’s content locates itself in those observations on making. Consider these titles of paintings from 2013: What Surrounds the Special Mark is Now in the Special Mark, The Platform Underneath And The Platform Below, Trying to Connect a Mark and Its Platform. In the case of this exhibition, the street-level vitrine gallery is itself one of Kniaz’s “platforms” put to use. Installed freestanding on the gallery floor are three new works from

Kniaz’s “Framework” series. Made of rounded wire cage-like forms, construction mesh, and
paint, Framework 1, 6, and 11 read more like line drawings or mechanisms for garnering sensation than traditional sculpture. Skeletal and serial, the structures illuminate the kind of playful inversions, repetitions, and rephrasings that lend Kniaz’s vision its singular agility.

Jackie Winsor (b. 1941 St. John’s, Newfoundland, Canada) has exhibited internationally since 1968 and currently lives and works in New York.