VISUAL ARTS STUDENT: Korakrit Arunanondchai ('12SOA), "Garden"

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Date:

From 28-Oct-10 (All day) through 04-Dec-10 (All day)

Location:

Mountain Fold 55 Fifth Avenue, 18th Floor New York, NY 10003

Contact:

Visual Arts

Info:

For further information regarding this event, please contact Visual Arts by sending email to visualarts@columbia.edu .

Mountain Fold is pleased to announce the opening of "Garden," a show of paintings, installation, and sculpture by Korakrit Arunanondchai. Arunanodchai's work plays with everything and its opposite: he makes abstracted derivatives of Hieronymous Bosch paintings, and hyperreal integrals of his own pieces, creating a visual calculus, a study of change, limits, and infinity.

Arunanondchai invites the viewer into a heavenly earth, that extends in one direction towards an imagined hell, and in the other towards a heaven. Yet these visual spaces are at once inviting and forboding: the light-seeping wooden prism on the ground suggests a point of emergence into living and a sealing off of death; or perhaps is could be a portal into Second Life, a way towards a digital reality that can be both idyllic and nightmarish. Hanging above this is a sculpture, whose elements allude to a life-cycle narrative, Judeo-Christian and Buddhist foundation stories, and human fears. Opposite is "The Garden of Earthly Delights," an 8x8 foot silk-screened painting, which borrows the structure from the renaissance original, but leaves behind its allegory and figuration.

Arunanondchai weaves such icons as the snake, the cross, and the jewel throughout his art: they are items readymade in meaning, connoting a million disparate things in different contexts. This art asks, in this moment, what does the transmigrated symbol mean? The artist transforms not only the symbol and Bosch's art, but also his own pieces, creating more and more abstracted iterations of them until they can exists only as solitary objects, installed in a fantasy gallery in a digital world.

"Garden" presents fantasy spaces where the the heavenly and the hellish, the alive and the dead, the serious and the joke, all contend with one another. Yet beneath the dynamic conceptual dichotomies are beautifully compelling and mysterious visual objects.


Gallery hours: Wednesday through Saturday 1:00- 7:00pm or by appointment.

 

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Columbia University School of the Arts offers MFA degrees in Film, Theatre Arts, Visual Arts, and Writing, an MA degree in Film Studies, a joint JD/MFA degree in Theatre Management & Producing, and a PhD degree in Theatre History, Literature, and Theory.