Blink, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 38 x 30 inches

Birds Of Burning Bramble, 2009, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 36 x 48 inches

Invisible Ghost, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 48 x 36 inches

Moving Still, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 28 x 36 inches

Hide N' Seek, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 66 x 48 inches

Some Assembly Required, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 44 x 60 inches

Mind Power, 2009, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 17 x 14 inches

Strong As A Symphony, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 60 x 44 inches

The Not-So-Distant Future, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 74 x 54 inches

The Many Wings of The Arts and Sciences, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 60 x 40 inches

Bright Ideas, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 28 x 23 inches

Tiger, tiger, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 28 x 25 inches

C, 2006, acrylic and collage on panel, 30 x 30 inches

Ploom, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 60 x 44 inches

Inside Out, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 38 x 30 inches

Prisoner of Imagination, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 54 x 75 inches

Make Like the Sun, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 44 x 32 inches

Strange Fruit, 2005, acrylic and paper collage on paper, 20 x 26 inches

Instance of Eruption, 2006, acrylic and paper collage on paper, 44 x 32 inches

Purple Mountain Majesties, 2007, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 38 x 30 inches

Purple Mountain Majesties, 2007, detail, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 38 x 30 inches

What John Saw, 2008, acrylic and paper collage on paper, 38 x 30 inches

Almond Sands, 2006, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 48 x 66 inches

Out of Darkness, 2006, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 66 x 48 inches

Forest Through The Weeds, 2006, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 18 x 12 inches

Never Die, 2006, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 22 x 30 inches

Never Die, 2006, detail, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 22 x 30 inches

Fighting Through a Screen, 2006, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 42 x 32 inches

Fighting Through a Screen, 2006, detail, acrylic and paper collage on panel, 42 x 32 inches

Aaron Wexler

Invisible Ghost

May 14 – June 20, 2009

 

The gallery is pleased to present Invisible Ghost, Aaron Wexler’s second one-person exhibition in New York. Aaron Wexler operates within a complex matrix of acrylic and paper collage on panel. The mat acrylic surfaces of his paintings are incised and peeled away to reveal playful dreamscapes of free association. Fractal and prismatic, his paintings are carefully constructed, the surfaces collaged with a myriad of cut shapes, a complex puzzle of figure and ground. His work synthesizes abstraction and figuration, physical and psychological space, optimism and anxiety. It is imbued with a fragile equilibrium of opposites.

Aaron Wexler often uses the sense of a dreamscape as a way of annexing the language of abstraction and employs subtle opposites (guns and flowers, the organic and geometric) as a way of paraphrasing the language of the subconscious. His imagery is vaguely familiar and yet strangely enigmatic. While visually dexterous, Wexler’s work is also inescapably material and object-like. The collage technique is nuanced and layered, elusive and reductive. Layers are built up in order to subtract from the overall image and create voids in the landscape of the imagery. Other areas use graphic injections of colour to define positive and negative outlined shapes.

While adopting a classic ‘cut and paste’ approach to collage, Wexler’s work also carries a seamlessness equally redolent of digitized media. In his most recent work, cut-and-paste is more than a mere methodology or exercise in formal aesthetics and instead becomes a lens through which the artist first fractures and then reconstitutes the natural order of things. He may have inherited the discipline of modernist image making, but he disregards its orthodoxy. Eyes, insects and architecture are all worthy catalysts for his projects. His subject matter shifts rapidly, but a deep focus unifies the images. Wexler renews one of modern art’s most meaningful histories, that of the active spectator.

Aaron Wexler was born in 1974 in Philadelphia; he lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. He received his M.F.A from the School of The Art Institute of Chicago in 1999. Selected solo exhibitions include: Use Your Indoor Voice, One In The Other Gallery, London, UK (2008) and Mind Over Matter, Josée Bienvenu Gallery, New York, NY (2006). Recent group exhibitions include: 1968-2008 The Culture of Collage, Pavel Zoubok Gallery, New York, NY, traveling to Zoeller Gallery at Penn State University, PA (2008); Twilight Musings, One In The Other Gallery, London, UK (2007); 181st Annual Invitational Exhibition of Contemporary Art, The National Academy Museum, New York, NY (2006); The New Collage, Pavel Zoubok Gallery, New York, NY (2006); Puzzle Palace, Josée Bienvenu Gallery, New York (2004); Some Exhaust, Lehmann Maupin, New York (2004); The Day After I Destroyed The Women I Wished I Had Not Destroyed The Women, 5BE Oliver Kamm Gallery, New York (2004). His work is featured in the catalogue for the forthcoming exhibition ABSTRACT AMERICA: NEW PAINTING AND SCULPTURE, at The Saatchi Gallery in London.

Excerpts from Marshall N. Price, Dan Schank, Suzanne Snider, and Maggie Wright included in the exhibition's accompanying zine.