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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Jessica Murray Projects is pleased to announce Orchestrion,
by David Ellis. The
exhibition will open Thursday, September 8, 2005 with a reception
from 68 pm, and will run through October 8. Gallery hours
are Tuesday-Saturday, 11 am6 pm.
David Ellis continues his cross-pollination of urban and rural
imagery in an exhibition that includes sculpture, painting, music,
performance, video and public art. Orchestrion seeks to mirror,
as well as question, the world in which we live using a visual language
informed by the artists childhood memories of the rural south,
the experimental hip-hop culture he grew into in the 80s,
and the crew of international artists he collaborates with called
the Barnstormers. The exhibition will include Bound,
a moving truck that Ellis painted improvisationally for five twenty-hour
days at the Savannah College of Art and Design. Commissioned by
the college, this project also generated a motion painting
video, documenting Ellis painting process and its response
to the setting in which it was created. The score for this video
will be played by Ellis kinetic orchestra of sculptural instruments
created from recycled industrial materials that play as ensemble
in the gallery. Orchestrion will travel to the Contemporary
Art Center of Cincinnati in January as part of their on-going contemporary
series Gadget: Mechanics and Motion in Contemporary Art.
Gallery Talk: September 10, 2PM by Matthew Mascotte, Curator, Savannah
College of Art and Design
This is Ellis second solo exhibition with Jessica Murray Projects.
His work has been exhibited throughout the United States, Europe,
and Asia. In addition to creating his own singular work, Ellis is
founder of the "Barnstormers," an artists collaborative.
Ellis's work has been reviewed in the New York Times, Sculpture,
Art Papers, Art Asia Pacific, and Flash Art.
Recently, Ellis work has been included at the Museum of Modern
Art and Smack Mellon in New York; SECCA and Lump Gallery in North
Carolina; The Urbis Museum in Manchester, United Kingdom, as well
as the Contemporary Museum, Hawaii. His work Granny is currently
on view in the exhibition Greater New York 2005 at
PS1/MOMA. Ellis lives and works in Brooklyn.
For more information, please contact the gallery at 212 633 9606
or info@jessicamurrayprojects.com.
Further details are available in Gallery
Information.
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