Margaret Thatcher Projects is proud to present the group exhibition Hybrid Form, which includes works by seven artists Frank Badur, Omar Chacon, Freddy Chandra, Kevin Finklea, Ted Larsen, Joanne Mattera, and Richard Roth. Each artist's work challenges the strictures of what defines a painting. Utilizing the medium of paint through varying modalities, the artists are able to stretch an audience's definition as to what constitutes a painting. This stretching of the definition of painting follows the tradition of earlier artists such as Rauschenberg who focused on pushing the boundaries of essentialism in art, bridging the gulf between painting, subject, and object.
Berlin-based artist Frank Badur's intuitive minimalist compositions draw his viewers into their subtlety with a delicate interplay of surface and color. Existing as an active engagement between modernist art history and contemporary thought, Badur seeks to find the pure meaning of painting. Badur allows the viewer to dive into his paintings and experience them without the clouding of subject or metaphor by neither mimetically nor metaphorically representing anything outside of the canvas.
Omar Chacon's colorful and energetic configurations symbolize both the unity and diversity of the Americas, specifically Colombia, where he was born and raised and New York, where he currently lives. He likens his works to a social gathering and on a larger scale, a nation, comprised of a diverse blend of culturally different peoples, living amongst each other with a sense of unity, yet maintaining individuality. Each drip in Le Jaune Mesalina is uniquely prepared separately off the canvas. Chacon then applies and collages these "brushstrokes" onto canvas building intricate and harmonious compositions.
Indonesian-American artist Freddy Chandra constructs luminously painted bars of cast acrylic experimenting with specific color relationships, value shifts, and dimensional modulations of density and transparency. To Chandra, elusive everyday moments such as overhearing a fragment of music only to hear it fade away, feeling the vibrations and movements of people and vehicles as they pass by, are all fluctuating instances that are experienced and recorded in a seemingly spectrographic way. To manifest this awareness Chandra structures his work within the confines of a logical and algorithmic process. Color is painted across the surface of the bars in such a way as to create an illusion of depth and an inner light that lends the pieces a lyrical flow.
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