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28 May 2012

Galerie Gabrielle Maubrie presents Joseph Havel 'History, Hope, Desire'


© Galerie Gabrielle Maubrie

Joseph Havel 'History, Hope, Desire'
Galerie Gabrielle Maubrie
http://www.gabriellemaubrie.com

Info

May 19 to July 10, 2012
Opened from Tuesday through Saturday from 2 to 7 pm

Contact

maubrie@orange.fr
Gabrielle Maubrie
33(0)142780397
33 (0) 42745400

Address

http://www.gabriellemaubrie.com
Galerie Gabrielle Maubrie
24 rue Sainte Croix de la Bretonnerie
Paris 75004
France

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JOSEPH HAVEL HISTORY, HOPE, DESIRE
Exhibition from may 19 to july 10, 2012

TO SEE THE TEXT IN FRENCH AND IMAGES CLICK ON THE LINK BELOW:
http://www.gabriellemaubrie.com/web.php?mode=article&id=66

History is a selective narrative constructed at the intersection of hope and desire. This is the same for a personal history such as the biography of an individual or the collective narrative written for a group with shared aspects or attributes. Each history is as notable for what it leaves out as what it includes so is inevitably a work of fiction; a manifestation of hope and desire given form.

The works by Joseph Havel in this exhibition divide into two bodies corresponding to the two rooms of the gallery. Each body responds to the idea of historical construction and selective memory in different poetically associative ways. The first room is a series of works made from castings of books that came from the artist’s own library, were inherited from his parents, or were discarded by the library at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston where Havel works as director of the school. The selection forms a version of an autobiography. The castings are either in bronze or translucent resin and their materiality translates the unavailable texts into a physical presence which is translucent or opaque; light or weighty. Each carefully crafted object contains visual details as a memory of the original transformed through process.

The second room is a survey of works which use shirt labels to construct wall assemblages. Havel refers to them as sculptures of paintings. They often use formal patterning based on modernist precedents by artists such as Agnes Martin and Frank Stella. This exhibition includes the first label piece White Names which was made in 1996 from the labels of discarded white shirts. Later assemblages use shirt labels that are custom woven using words photo copied from books in the artist’s library, most frequently The Dream Songs by john Berryman. The labels in these works are densely packed edgewise into Plexiglas and for the most part the text is unreadable. In places where the orderliness of the pattern breaks down a twisted label reveals the text as a single word poem compressed by 30,000 labels. Two new labels were woven for this exhibition, Hope and Desire, both in identical pale blue.

On Point  extends the central premise of the exhibition that history is a constructed fiction used to determine and explain group identity into the realm of personal identity. The shoes are a construction of opposites (black and white) that represent a hybrid identity. The on point is a reference to the moment of balance in ballet when the dancer balances in a moment of stillness between movements. The use of men’s shoes makes this a kind of self portrait which has been a trademark of most of the artist’s exhibitions since the inclusion of the shoe/identity becomes part of a more collective and abstracted grouping lost in the On Point chorus.