Jason clay lewis
drop dead gorgeous
October 9 – Npvember 9, 2008
31GRAND is pleased to present Jason Clay Lewis’s Drop Dead Gorgeous.
Empathy/apathy, desire/revulsion, poison/panacea, death/life, religion/blasphemy:
Drop Dead Gorgeous distills these binaries into Poison/Religion, pushing
the boundaries between them. Which is good? Which is bad? Are these
judgments even possible?
The poison pieces reference Empathy: as we go up the food chain, our
empathy increases until we reach the ultimate form represented by the
Crucifixion. Lewis’s fascination with religious topoi—seen
throughout his work—this time focuses on semiotic ambivalence
of Christian iconography. “d-CON Mary,” a recognizable form
covered in rat poison packaging and prominently displayed bar codes,
questions not only the innocuousness of religion but also the commercialization
of religious iconography.
The motif of the skull has reoccurred throughout Lewis’s work,
appearing in works ranging from the contemplative Ikebana sculptures,
to the death’s head pin-up girl paintings, to the horrors of war
as seen in the Torture Panel paintings. Hyperfeminized and seductively
posed pinups are topped by bare skulls—a disjunction that causes
an abrupt cessation of panting adolescent desire. However, despite its
aura of death and horror, the skull also recalls and reaffirms life:
if Death were one of these golden haired seductresses, who would be
afraid?
Jason Clay Lewis came to New York in 1991 on a scholarship and internship
at Universal Limited Art Editions. From 1992 – 1994 he worked
with Jasper Johns as his personal studio assistant. Continuing his education,
he graduated from The Cooper Union with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1997.
Jason has been actively showing for the last several years both nationally
and internationally. His work has appeared and reviewed in publications
including Art In America, World of Art, Art On Paper and The Los Angeles
Times.
“As an artist, my approach has always been, intentionally, to
confound and challenge attempts to make things fit into what we already
know and think. I strive to question perceived beauty, passion, life,
death, and creation. I have an urgent conviction that art is a passionate
and essential affair, a matter of life and death, where one senses the
only response to death is art. Without glossing over the violence of
the natural world I ask questions about man’s suicidal folly,
the one we call progress, a merger into a religion of commerce and profit,
of false facades, and using a strategy to make us reconsider our world
of visual imagery. I tinker with these visual explanations, trying to
give them purpose, direction, and meaning. Always perfectly aware that
knowing this constant probing does not have a sequence to a perfect
solution. Atypical and fascinating, as an adventurer blending expression,
analysis, and experience, I use every means and media available to explore
the love of knowledge and depict limits, while trying to push those
limits even farther. My interest in unique materials helps to develop
my ideas of attraction verses repulsion allowing my work to have both
a strong visceral feeling while maintaining a direct cerebral presence.”
Jason currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
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