In
THE
BOX,
Pippy
Houldsworth
Gallery
Pippy
Houldsworth
Gallery
is
delighted
to
present
a
new
commission
for
The
Box
by
New
York
based
artist
Daniel
Arsham.
Arsham,
known
for
his
interventions
that
challenge
our
relationship
to
space
and
accepted
realities,
from
clocks
to
chairs,
staircases
and
gallery
walls,
has
been
invited
to
respond
to
The
Box
–
a
miniature
project
space
consisting
of
a
floating
white
cube
set
inside
a
black
vertical
opening.
The
Box
is
a
unique
architectural
space
through
which
the
gallery
facilitates
new
projects
with
important
emerging
and
established
artists.
Using
The
Box
to
transform
his
two
new
sculptures
into
curios,
Arsham
causes
us
to
look
closely
and
anthropologically
at
the
form
and
the
idea
of
these
reformulated
cameras.
Arsham
says
of
this
project:
“Photography
has
always
played
a
large
part
in
the
development
of
my
work
and
my
original
training
was
in
black
and
white
photography.
I
have
never
used
photographs
as
the
final
product
within
my
practice
however
I
am
a
prodigious
consumer
of
images.
They
are
used
as
reference
material
within
my
paintings
and
as
a
materials
catalogue
on
my
iPhone.
I
have
thousands
of
banal
photos
of
various
surfaces
and
materials
that
provide
reference
for
my
sculptural
work.
I
have
also
been
a
collector
of
cameras
themselves.
A
photograph
can
often
house
the
profound
ability
to
encapsulate
a
moment.
These
two
camera
sculptures
collapse
the
form
of
the
camera
with
a
material
specific
to
a
time
and
place.
The
sculptures
are
made
from
materials
that
could
have
shown
up
in
images
taken
with
the
cameras
themselves.
The
sculpture
formed
in
broken
glass
is
identical
to
the
35mm
camera
that
I
had
when
I
was
12
years
old.
In
August
of
that
year
there
was
an
epic
Hurricane
in
Miami
in
which
I
was
nearly
killed.
Broken
glass
was
like
sand
all
over
the
house
and
even
into
the
streets.
The
Stone
Camera
is
meant
to
replicate
the
Cannon
EOS
7D
that
I
have
now.
I
was
recently
in
Cambodia
studying
the
ruins
in
and
around
Angkor
Wat
and
this
camera
is
carved
from
the
same
stone
as
the
ruins.
A
future
relic.
In
my
studies
of
photography
I
was
very
interested
in
Roland
Barthes'
ideas
surrounding
the
studium
and
the
punctum.
‘Studium
denoting
the
cultural,
linguistic,
and
political
interpretation
of
a
photograph,
punctum
denoting
the
wounding,
personally
touching
detail
which
establishes
a
direct
relationship
with
the
object
or
person
within
it.’
For
me
these
sculptures
begin
to
blend
those
two
concepts
into
each
other
within
an
object,
rather
than
in
an
image.”
Daniel
Arsham
was
the
last
artist
to
be
invited
by
Merce
Cunningham
to
collaborate
with
him
on
the
set
designs
for
his
performances,
following
an
impressive
roster
of
Cunningham’s
artist-‐collaborators
including
Robert
Rauschenberg
and
Jasper
Johns.
Recent
solo
exhibitions
include
the
Park
Avenue
Armory,
New
York
for
the
set
design
of
Merce
Cunningham
Dance
Company’s
last
performances;
Festival
d’Avignon,
Avignon;
OhWow
Gallery,
Los
Angeles;
and
Miami
Art
Museum,
Miami.
Recent
group
exhibitions
include
Brooklyn
Academy
of
Music,
New
York;
Musée
de
Valence,
Valence;
New
Museum,
New
York;
In
Extenso,
Clermont-‐Ferrand;
Museum
of
Contemporary
Art,
Florida;
and
Musée
d’Art
Contemporain,
Marseilles.
Arsham’s
commission
for
The
Box
will
run
concurrently
with
his
solo
exhibition
at
Galerie
Perrotin,
Paris.
Opening
Hours:
Mon-‐Fri
10-‐6,
Sat
10-‐4.
For
further
information,
please
contact
Claire
Nichols
on
+44
(0)20
7734
7760
or
claire@houldsworth.co.uk.
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